To link to the entire object, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed the entire object, paste this HTML in websiteTo link to this page, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed this page, paste this HTML in website

ii ii in j i in ii i it I hi Ay VOLUME XLIII. COLUMBUS, OHIO, TUESDAY, MARCH 8, 1853. NUMBER 28. Y Uhdilg Olfto Statt Journal 19 PUBLISHED AT COLUMBUS EVERT TUESDAY BI0HN1NQ, IT 6G0TT ft BASCOM, JOOUfAL BUtLDIXOB, UtOU AND FUEL BTSlsrS XHTK1H0B OR UQ1. TERMS Invaritihty in advana: In Columbus, S2 00 ft Ttar) by mail, it GO ; club of four and upwards, 1.25 ; of ten and upward, Cl.00. TUB DA I LT JOURNAL la furuixhcd to city subwribersat M 00, and by mall at Jfi.00 n yoar. TUB TKMVEttiaY JOURNAL Is 93.00 ft year. RA TKS OF AD VER TISWoIn THE WEEKLY JO VRNAL 1 square, U SfJUartS, fl squnre, m column, M column, column. 11 iilli So ; So I So i o So ! So 9o So S l8o 60 761 001 251 753 253 604 006 000 608 00 761 2fil 762 '263 60 4 00 5 000 008 00 IX 1 00 1 'i !ifi8 604 606 000 608 0011. 17. 1 35 2 26 8 60 4 00 6 00 0 00 8 0010. 14. !. changeable monthly, KG a year ; weekly . ohauqpsnla quarterly , ohuigp&hle quarterly , , , , cuaugvable quarterly , 10 Hum of ttils itiod typo I rerkonnd a oquar. Advertlwmenrt orOeml on the Inrldo Mrhmlroly, doublo the. abovo rates. All leaded liotiwa charged double, and measured aa LT solid. 1)10 Ccgiriatuw. Monday, February iS, 153. IN SENATE. 9 o'clock, a. m. Mr. Hill offered a resolution, "that tlio Auditor of State be requested, at his earliest convenience, to report to the Senate the amount paid out of tho several county treasuries for the publication of laws of a general nnture ia tho newspapers in tlio several counties in this State in the year 1852," which was adopted. Mr. Hnwkins ottered n resolution requesting tho Auditor of State to report the amount of money now in the Stutn Treasury applicable tu llio payment of the principal and interest or the State debt. Mr. Wilson moved to amend by adding ulsn the nmoiint that will bo required to pay tho interest and principal falling duo on the first nf January next. Tho amendment was agreed to, mid the resolution adopted. Tho Sennlo then took a recess. 2 o'clock, p. m. ! The Senate wont into committee of iho whole Mr. Van Husk irk in the Chairand considered the general ordor. After some time the committee arose and re ported tho orders back, and they woro severally appropriately referred. On motion of Mr. Wilson, the bill to fix tho rate of interest and to prevent usury, was taken up, and Mr. Wnlkup moved its indefinite postponement. Wr, Wilson spoko against the motion, and rend o collocntinn of quotations from the " higher law," Mr. Gillett desired him lu rend something with which the Senate was nwo familiar, and Mr. Wilson complied iti an extemporaneous speech When lie had concluded, tho question was token, nnd the yeas and nays being demanded, reunited yeas 111, nays 0. So the bill whs indefinitely postponed. The bill to amend tlio tax law (reducing the amount of exempted properly to sevoiity-five dollars) was taken up, and iho question being on it;i piissitge, Mr. Hawkins ndled for the rending of the bill. Mr. Ctuliing in tho chair tho bill has been rend three times. Mr. Hawkins. have a right to dnmund the reading or the bill. Mr Cushing. There Is no law for reading a bill four times, I believe. Mr. Hawkins. I call for the rending of the bill. Mr. CiiHhiug. It has been moved and seconded tint the bill be read the fourth time. Is the Senate ngreed 1 Cries of agreed ngreed and grini laughter mid the bill was rend the fourth time. Mr. Johnston moved to recommit tho bill to a select committee of nno, wih instructions to strike out the exemption, which was lost yeas 11, nnys 14. And the bill passed yeas 21, nays 4. The Senators who voted in tho negative were Messrs. Alward, Finck, Joh ,stnn und I'm doc The Senate adjourned. HOUSE OF KEPltESENTATIVES. 9t o'clock, a. m. Reports of standing commit lea. Mr. Cockerill. from The uommitee on Corporation, reported back Senate amendments to the bill amending the general corporation law, and recommending disagreeing to the same. These amendments give existing corporations liberty to accept any of iho provisions of tl;e corporation b:l without accepting iho remaindor, and repealing tlio provisions of iheir chartorB inconsistent with the provisions accepted lleport agreed to, and Iho Senate amendments rejected yeas 4, nnyi 57. Mr. (iest, from iho Judiciary committee, reported back Sennte bill for the division id' the town of Sidem into two election precincts, and recommended its third reading. Agreed to. Mr. Hotik, from tho same committee, reported hack the bill regulating deacon M nnd the distribution ot per. on the tal sonal estates, without recommendation, nnd it was In id Also, tho bill authorizing trustees of townshtim to re ceive deeds of re d estate, in trust, with ati) nuiiinetiln, which were agreed to, and the bill ordered to a third reading. Abo, lh ? bill amending tho act creating a lien in fa vor oi mecnanics, and recommending agreeing lo Sen ate amendments. A cried to vena (if), nays 1. Alio, Iho bill to prevent thosdeol cemeteries, and recommended its iiioefiniio postponement. Agreed to. Mr. Suuih, from the committee on Finance, reported back the bill fir eMublishing an Institution for the support of Idiots, and recommended its postponement to January next. Agreed to. Mr. Honk, from tlio Judiciary committee, reported back Senate bill, supplementary to the act lor tho support of illegitimate children, and recommended its third reading. Kend the third time, and passed yens 02, nays 2. Reports of Stint Committees. Mr. Stowo n-ported back Iho bill to provide for the evils resuhiug from tlio traffic in intoxicating liquors, with nn amendment, inning out iho whole bill and inserting a new one. Laid on tho table to be printed. 2 o'clock, p. i. Mr. Itli, from tho rommittro of conference on the bill relating In Snto roads, made a report which wa agreed to by iho House yens M, nnvs ;t. Mr Hughes moved to luke up tho bill authorizing citioi to borrow money inr water work, pcIicmi! house, &c. Auroeit lo. The Senato nmoiidirciits were agreed toyeas .IS, nays 7. Mr. Plumb, from the committee on Schools, reported back the School bill, with several amendments, which were ordered lo be printed. Committee of the Whole. Tt House resolved lt.elf into a committee of the Whole, ami considered the amendments to tho Militia bill, and the bill regulating descents, and reported them back with sundry amend ments, and the hrst was committed to the select com' mittoe which reported them, and tun second was re ferred to the Judiciary committee, after a motion to postpone was lost. The bill lo extend the provisions of commissioners ot sewers to all the counties in tlio mute, was indefi nitely postponed. Also, Iho bill authorizing trensurors to refund tax in certain cases. The House then adjourned. Tnradnyt March 1, 1H.V.I. IN 8KNATR. 94 o'clock, a. m. The bill to limit the liability of oxec utors and ad' ministratori, and to amend the act to provide for tlio settlement of the estatrs of deceased persons, was rend tne iniru lime and passed. The Senate agreed to the report of the commitleu of Uonlerouce on the bill to provide lor the laying out nm establishing of State roads. On motion of Mr. Sherman, the bill lo provide against the evils resulting I mm the tralhc in lutoxicaiiug Ii qnora was tnken up, and The question being on agreoing to the motion of Mi Vattier to strike out the report ot the soloct committee on Temperance and insert a new bill, Mr. Sherman honed that if any rewect were to l shown to the wishes of that vnst number of petitioners who had loaded down tho tables of tho Senate, it would be shown in an intelligible way, and if the Senate was aisposea to pass a tun lor tne suppression ot mteinper. ance, u annum un me mil reported irom the commute Ho would not trouble the Sem.to with a speech uni tho subject, but thought the report infinitely superior to the substitute ui the gentleman Irom Hamilton, Mr. Cox regarded the Senate as only a representa tive ol the people, end thought the indications ol po ular feeling sufficiently manifest to iustify tint I.eci lature In enacting a stringent law. Ho would vote for the report, and aantnat the aubstituto. Mr. Kiddle advocated ihoamenilment of Mr. Vattier, and Mr Hawkins replied. Mr. H. defined his position to be in favor of a law of the strictest provisions, whenever be thought the tone of public sentiment in the State would justify or sustain it. Until that time ar rived he thought its enactment would be pernicio and would vote against It. Aftr further dnbftt, without taking the qtiesti, The Senate took a rncess. o'clock, ft. m The quest! in h'dny on striking out the amendment reported trom the commiltoe, it wa taken nnd lost, A oall of the Senate was then ordered, and 23 Seni tors answered to their names, The question Ihen recurrinir on strikino out the orl ginat bill ami Inserting the amendment of the com mi nee. Mr, Sherman moved the reference of tho whole subject to the select committee on Temperance, which was agreed to and the bill wai referred. The Senate than went Into committee of the Whole Mr. Rex in the Chair and considered the general calendar. After some litno the committee arose and reported the orders back, and they woro severally appropriately roierreu. Mr. Oradlebatiyli offered a series of resolutions re citing the resolves made by the General Assembly ol Ohio, on the 2'Jd dny of February, 1818, endorsing and approving (he course of the Hon. Thomas Corwin, in relation tu the wnr with Mexico attaching to them a scries of preambles, containing rumors false and scandalous pe remises, and closing witli the following resolution:"Therefore, be it Resolved, by (he General Assembly of the Statu of Ohio, That said resolutions be expunged from the journals of tho Senate Biid House of H"p's, and for that purpose the Clerks of the Senate Bd House shall bring the original manuscript record of the journals of their respective bodies tor tho session of 1810-7, before said brunches of the General Assembly, at such time as shall bo determined upon for that purpose, and in the presence thereof sin II draw black lines around suid reBolutioiiB.and writo across the face thoreof, in strong letters, the fallowing words : " Expunged by order of the General Assembly, this day of March, in the year ot our Lord ns.i,i llio tesolutioiiH were laid on Hie table, and ordered to bo printed. Mr. Crndlebaugh offered a resolution requesting tho Auditor of State to submit lo tho Senate tho account of Samuel Mednry for tho printing executed by him for the first session of the present Legislature. Mr. Ferguson movetl to amend by adding, "olio the reasons that induced the Auditor of State to refuse to audit the account," Tho amendment wns agreed to and the resolution was adopted. Tlio Senate then adjourned. HOUSE OF REI'KESENTATIVES. !4 o'clock, a. m. Dills read a third time. To provide for the purchase of stationery and fuel for the Stato, Passed yeas 57, nays 1. 8 on at o bill to divido the town of Salem. Warren county, into two election precincts. Passed yeas 55, nays 0. Sennte bill supplementary to the act for selling lands granted by Congress for the support of religion in the Ohio Company's purchase. Passed yeas iM, nay 2. Mr. Mills, from the committee on Hoads, reported buck the bill surrendering turnpike nnd plank rouds to iho counties through which they pass. Passed yeas !)fj, nays J. The flouiotook a recess. 24 0 clock, p. m. Mr. Kridor, from the atanding committee on Rail roads and Turnpikes to which was referred the Senate bill uuihorizing railroad companies to issue bonds nnd increase their capital stock in certain cases, reported tho sumo back without amendments, and recommended its p'isBage. Passed yens 29, nays 9. lieporl oj sftcet committee Mr lies', Irom the com mitten of Cuil.-reiice, reported hark Iho hill respecting tho publishing of tho laws, with amendments authorizing the county commissioners to contract at any price lor p-iblinliiiif; such taws as the Auditor, Probnte J mice and Proiecuting Attorney might select. Mr. a Neil opposed tlio adoption ol the report. Mr. Gout oxplniiied tho amendments. Mr. Ward, of Wurren, opposed iho report. Messrs. Casad and McCull advocated its adoption. Messra. Withrow, Davidson and Damon opposed it. The report was then re jc ted yens 23, nays 4G. Mr. Gust moved another committee of Conference. After a long discussion, the motion wns agreed to yeas till, nays II. t Mr. Hush reported back the bill providing for the appointment of guardians for drunkards, gamblers Ax, il recommended its engrossment. Mr. I.elilond moved iis postponement till Janunry ipxt. Agreed to. Mr. Blixs tittered a resolution requiring tho enmmit- t on Printing In report as nearly us possible tho cost Public I'Muting tins your. Agreed to. The bill for the creation of n Homo of Correction for juvenile offenders, wan taken up. Mr. Iiniond moved its postponement till Jannary xi. inrneu yeas .10, wiys ,'o. The lloiifo then adjourn d. Tui'sriiiy, ill 11 n il 'J, 18.13. IN SENATE. OA o'clock, a. m. Mr. Riddle reported back the bill lo authorize the holding of special terms of the Supreme Courts, with amendments, which wera agreed to, nnd tho bill was lost 011 its passage. 1 ho same gentleman reported imck the bill to au thorize suiu to be brought on written instruments in certain cues, without nmeudmeut, nnd the bill was lered in its third reading forthwith and passed. Also, the bill to prescribe the cIVect ol tender in certain casts, which was ordered to its third rending rUiwilh, and pasted. Also, tlio bill allowing writs of rorliorari from Courts of Common Pleas to Justices of tho Peace, in minnl cases, which was rend tho third time and passed. Also, 1 lie bill in reiuiioti 10 me exceptions 10 appeal ids uoloro Justices ot the I once, which wns ordered be read the third timo to-morrow. Also, tho bill relating to the entry and recording of recognizances in tlio Uourtsot umntniin t leas, which was read tho third timo nnd passed. Also, the hill to amend Die act relating to the orgn- nizntiuii of Courts of Justico, their powers and duties, ith amendments, which were agreed to, and the bill Tdcred to be read the third limn lo-morrow. (in motion of Mr. (illicit, iho vote by which the authorize the hold ma of special terms of the tipremo Courts wns lost, was reconsidered, ami (he The amendments of the Senate committee wero then agreed to yeas 44, nays 20. The bill was then ordered to bo enem ,!. Mr. Jonea roported back the bill to repeat the act exempting the homestead of families from sale on exe cution, and recommended its passage Mr. Ward, of Crawford, moved to postpone tillJan uary next. Carried veas 50. nnvs 9a Mr. Williams renorted back ! S.nntn hill on. lating the sale of nostrums, and recommended its post- un uniiuury next, uameu, Mr. Plumb moved to take up the school bill. Agreed to. The first nmendment, exempting cities and incorpo minx vinuues unvine a iinaru 01 CiUiicaiion irom 1 in jurisdiction of the township Hoard, was agreed to. 1 un second, third, tourth and tilth amendments were then agreed lo, being verbal. A motion was made to amend Iho sixth amendment, requiring an enumeration nf the voutb between ibe ages of live ami twenty-one yenrs, by striking out live nun omening iour. Lost yeas nays 4!J. Mr. Hamoco moved to amend nv rnntiirinff the anil ine rot ion to be made by tho Clerk instead of the Directors. Lost. Mr. O'Neil moved lo strike out Hie 20th and Slat sections, which provide fur the establishment of town ship High schools. Mr. O'Neil said, that in his opinion the common poo-pie should be Inxed onlv for ihe aonnort of common schools- If a higher education wns desired, let those pay mr 11 wno received it, Mr. Gest opposed the mntinn. These sections formed a most valuable portion of the bill. They furnished ine piorer class ot youth with the means of receiving a better education than the common schools furnished. and if government interested it sell in the means of uucituou ai nu, iisnuuid go to the extent Itirntshea by these High Schools. Mr. Plumb advocated the system nf High Schools as being more economical to tho lowmhips than to do woiioui inom, Mr. Ward, of Crawford, moved a recess till seven o'clock p. m. Mr. moved a recess (ill 94 0 .clock to-mor- Mr. Shellnbarger moved toadionrn. 11. nays 30. 00 the House adjourned. Carried yeas iKisccllany. bill was laid on iho tnU Mr. A hard reported hick the bill to regulate the foes of I'rotiilo Judges, with amendments, whirli re ngreed to, and Ihe bill p;isted. 2t o'clock, p. m. Tho bill suppleinenlary to iho act to provide lor tlio eniion and refutation 01 incorporated conn:itucswn read Iho third time, and passed. Also, the loll to repeal ceriaiu sections of nets there- imined, (the charter ni tne uoiumuus, nqua and Indiana Railroad Uouipanv;) which rimed. House amendments to the hill authorizum Iho re It 11 piistiuieiit 01 turnpike, ah Aunniizeu mm pianK roads to tho counties, towns, or Miles through which I hey pns, were ngroeti 10. Mr. hilhourn moved to taae tin iho mil to nrovidi r tho better orcimiznlion of the State treasury : which was agreed toi and ihe question being on agreeing to the amendments ol ihe select committee. Mr. Atkinson adverted to the speech ol Mr. Wilson, as published in the Ohio Statesman, and replied at the nri'ument of that xentleman and Mr. Mnnuen Mr. W tison replied ai cotisideraoio length, ami as a life-long democrat administered a severe rebuke lo the loitato real ol ihe henutor Irom Uarroll. Alter further debate, Mr. Kilhourn moved the previ ous question, and the yeas ami nays being demanded, worn ordered, nnd resulted yeas II, nays IS. So the previous question wns not sustained. A motion to commit to the committee on Privileges nnd Elections, was lost. A motion by Mr. Wilson to commit to a select com mittee of one was lost. A call of iho Senate was had, and 29 Senators an swered to their names. Tho question was then taken on the passage nf the II, nnd resulted yens 18, nays 12. Ho the bill psMctl. Mr. Wilson ottered a resolution, that no new bills bo introduced after Monday next, which wns agrenl to. 1 he Senate then adjourned. Idind, how had she learned to distinguish colors? nad n t that doctor an uxe to grind T ' ' Not knowing, can't suy.' A friend who lately took a husmnsa-trin to Pitts burgh and Cincinnati, expressed himself highlypleosed wilh the 'Queen Citvof the West' nlreadv so creat, and vet bo ranidlv increasing. He savs that 'it comes aa natural for tho young bucks of Cincinnati to talk of wiuh, ns 11 uoes tor tne utile children in rrauco w speak French. The incroasinn nrice of pies is dis cussed even in the parlors of the famous Durnot House-But he says ihe greatest place on the Ohio river is Pomeroy, or 'Coal Port,1 which has a continuous front of live miles on the river, and extends back as far you can see! Just below Parkersburg, Virginia, ns ue was rapidly moving down the Ohio in the beautiiui packet steamer Pittsbtirch. commanded by Cant. Hugh Campbell, he passed tho island rendered so famous years ago by tho connection of Aaron Burr wilh tho then owner of it, who had made it almost a paradise. He was informed by a fellow-passenger that that was uinney Hazard s island ; and he was tnrther entertained by a description of the sumntuous stvlo in which old Blanoy Hazard lived on that beautiful island in the unto 1 A lively Philadelphia contemporary, who, it is just possiuio, may have sumo musical mend who has uecn less successful before the public, wonders why Mr. Dempster, the distinguished Scottish vocalist, with songs and ballads oft-repeated, and 'simple' nt that, and with only the aid of a piano, 'shniild be able, night after night, to entertain crowds of Philadelpliiuns, in long succession.' The 'marvel' is easily solved : the people like his performances. In Albany, recently, Mr. Dempster returned over two hundred dollars, at tho door, to persons for whom thero wns not room in the largo hull where be gave his concerts' simple ' as they were. We aro glad again to hear from Professor Sphinx. Although ho speaks, aa usual, in allegory, yet ohservo how pungent he is; how bo ' keeps due on' and 'nover lets up' until his moral is educed from tho toughest nnd knottiest theme t NOViT. FARULE. BT O, SPHINX, MASTER OP ARTS, AND I. AT I! DIRECTOR OF A PLANK ROAO COM PANT. To tehich is adtlcd one anecdote, translated expressly for the Knickerbocker Magazine, from the writings of Diatoms Siculut. I. THK LION WITH A TENPKR CONSCIENCE. A gouty old gormandizer of a lion lay in his cavo on a litter of dead men's bones, glutting himself with tho blood of women and children, which his servants brought to him from nit quarters of the earth. An at- tendant announced lhat His Majesty's eldi st son, who had left tho paternal cave ninny years before to sunk his fortune, hail returned, nnd wished to pay his ro- spects to the Governor. "So that ungrateful 'ound has come back, has ho? cried the King of Beasts, mumbliug a baby's skull between his old filing molars. 'What does he look like, and be to him V Big and danuorous. voiir Majesty Ihe attendant said. ' He growls like the distant thunder, and cracks his tail like a cart whip. He is thought to look like your Majesty ' ' Hum 1' grunted the old lion. ' Show him in. But stop. Wot kind of a charucterdocshe bear? It seems to mo that we have heard some complaints ogainst him; which Is very odd, for I look partie'lar paint to teach him Ihe catechism myself, when he was a cub, and gave him lessons in humility overy Saturday I in gin.- "Oh, Sire Ihe attendant said, 'he generally be-j haves himself pretty well, considering: but he has I somehow got a liking for human flesh, and now and men eats up a man. Wot a ornhle and hextraord narv circumstance ! roared this old lion. Go fell the 'orrid young ennni-1 bal that I can' set my oyos on him without 'orror. Its 1 tchuo'orrid for belief! And after all his lessons in humility and the catechism, too! I can't be'old him I Bid him begon) but say to him, that my prayers are ' daily offered in his be'alf HOW SCIENCE AND POLITICAL XCONOMY, LINKED ARM IN ARM, ROASTED APPLES ON AN IKPROVKD PLAN. A certain Political Economist, who was alo an liure, being grieved ut the resent mode 01 roasting apples, 'ether one snrinir moruinu. nnd lressed them thus: I have Ioiil' inspected, my friends, that the mode of producing masted apples which Imb prevailed from theearliestagesdownto the present time, is attended with the most frightful waste 01 latmr, and consequently ol national wonuh. lam happy to Btato, that 1 have at laat been able to base my views on this sn Inert on the most sat in factory data continues m near mam until ne gets live or six on ma troV6r,ib,y t1Bt tll ammllt 0, Mmr mmlly Bn)lied : : . ' , ' , , r ' . , in the uniied otates to the procesi round ihe great shiny board until ult the 1 brnudys-and- waters nm numbed. Seen il repeatedly. Jimmy generally has plenty of patrons. Students, wrapped in shawls, and wearing slouched felt-hats, talking of ' Profs ' prayora,' and poetry, romance and recitations: ' Englishmen, drinking ' arfaud-arf,' and KNICKERBOCKER GOSSIP. The Editor's table of l his most sprightly Mag. iizino, is always rich, juicy reading. The alternation, from grave to guy, from tho finest touches of pathos to the most ludicrous pictures of fun, are not equaled by any magazine of tho day. We copy, as usual, a few of iho many goad things in that department: We derive iho following from a welcome correspon-'hl at New Haven, (Conn,) Tho sketch will remind tho reader, in some of its features, of Dickens' Parlor Orator : ' In our place (110 matter where) wo huve a nuiel Bugiyi alc-hoiieo, kept by an honest, nhittnute. and clever (American clever) old Johnny Bull,' whom wo will call Jimmy rond. Jimmy is just such another fellow aa old John Willet, of the ' Maypole' inn; comes down on a man in tho same way that John (before he went 'lo the Sulwanners'l used to comodown on Utile Solomon Daisy, when Solomon ventured to say that the moon rose at a certain hour: 'Never you mind about the moon. Don't you trouble yourself about her. You let iho moon alone, and I'll let you alone Now Jimmy Pond will interfere when a nartv of Gen tlemen are talking together when, too, Jimmy hasn't tho slightest idea of the topic with: 'Gents, allow me 10 correct yon ; 'ear what rve got to any hrst. And then he tangles himself up in a sentence without the slightest meaning ; a sentence that would make Jack Buushy (if Jack could bo p rest lit) nod Ids head with emphatic approval. But Jimmy has a cheerful read ing-room, capital old ' a huer, ' Punch, and all the Loudon papers, and above ult, when the night is cold and stormy, a glowing tiro in the grate: so 'peoples' unit) uiKt-ii no uiiuiiuo u itii. I 1 - . c .... . I ni I mil in riintiliR nfrncn i.: i" .VVi' Z "'i " S'-i . mmy T"" in the pre, is no one in but . mself: ouietlv sittin in n conmr. I . '8 " together one spring morning, and . ... . ' . llUi stealing a glance at Jimmy, now anil then, over ihe uupti ui a iiowcpnpi-r ur 11 puwier piut-poi. Ill ine middle of Jimmy's reading-room there is a large round table: at this table ho usually sits, with su think warm ' before him. Well, Jimmy takes a few sips of the lluid, and Ihen fancies he 'can a order' from a customer, and goes tn Ihe bar for unoilur glu. Ho d.sciMs.ng the men s ot ' Hobby ' Peel and Johnny , lhirty four cont, , , ,mv Russell, or perhaps lauphmg at IV sel, for .tenhag my friendB, not merely for tho pi 'a eulogy ' Iroui a i ranchman. All kinds of chnrac- toJynur view this appalling tact, lers round to Jimmy Pond's. processes of placing tho ap ples in pans, putting the pans into oyf-ns, and afterwards removing the tame, is sufficient, if employed in producing bats, bouts, suspenders, broom-slicks,darning-needles, shoe-pecs, or pitch-forks, or other subjects of national wealth, to augment tho aggregate wealth of Ihe country hy a sum total ot two hundred and twenty-sevon thousand one hundred and sixty-six dot- ive called you together, purpose of holding up your view this appalling tact, but also lor Iho pur pose of showing you how, by the application of acien- 1 was mm jimmy snoiue some time ago, looainc -,. ..- .1.' 1... ovnumb.roriho'lliu.tr;trdNow ilh mln' .J wlf,B , , v. ',11 uni n r pti Huiiiiiiiiiii .,. ""'K""- ,,m. timo miR-tintl,. ol Iho labur now nocewary t, cope,- Jimmy was -on me so arc 11 mroir jouii rnuiK 1 ,i, ,.-rt., i, ,ii-.ti ..it.a- f.i,....i. f lit. n.itl tl..... I .li(..l Im. .It.mllnr. I,, ill. liicr tnl.... V" " " , ... ... . - - " . n " I industry : nmnelv. to Mm nrtwlnrtion ot hats. shou-neia. ha tl nut inmnw nt linl hunt iilim luln III linftil. I i. ' ... ', ' v' ...i.fiL - .1 n -1 ... i p I 1- ,1 . 1 il-l 1 uapoiiuura, bbuuiuh, puny, rtu iiauiici, nnu BU'iorio, : . r ' 1 , 1 , 1 1 1 p 'j I greatly lo ihe mcreaie ol nniional wealth and the pro J .... r : , ,.' , " ' niotion ot hrt ness and stillness that it was a silent city, deserted oat undecayed, which the growth o) a luxuriant wil dernesfl had overtaken and buried. It is curious that it should be but "across a ferry' as it were, from Havana, the most oul-doora-y city in tne world, to Savannah, tho must tn-duors-y. it can not be altogether a matter of principle, though Savan nnh is said to be the most religious of towns, and Havana (where I heard tho military band play polkas as part ol the Babbath service), is perhaps as peculiarly irreligious. Nor can it be altogether a peculiar ity of racethough the Havanese would seem lo play the sun-full as naturally as ihe S&vannese play the oysior. there is n fashion which is part 01 the character of a town, ditl'ertng in different places to a degree which is not easily explainable in the amount of appearing abroad, ("gadding," as the straight-laced call it), which is respectublo and proper. The subject might profitably be lectured upon. Inestimable as the fireside virtues are, domestic bliss requires a cer iaiu amount ot airing, in "best-regulated lamiltes," and the natural desire "tnseo and be seen," basils use in the composition of human Bociety. With twenty thousand inhabitants, Savannah seems lo have no poor people. In various rambles, during tho few days of mv stav thero. I could find no ounrter of the city whero ihere wore any but comfortable dwel lings more than comlurtablo, indeed, lor the poorest inhabitant has an avenue of shade-trees before his door. and must see on open square from bis window. The luxuries of park culture, which the noblemen of England spend fortunes in maintaining around their dwellings, are hero at tho humblest man's threshold, freoof cost. No child can grow no in Savannah without Nn i nre for a nurse beautiful trees for the infant wakinc-! droam to build its nest in velvet grass, clover and but- i tercups, to make the world seem like a play-ground, and the commonest highway a path of flowers. Does ! anyone think that character is not n fleeted by such influences that hope and imogination, confidence and cheerful habit of temper, (to say nothing of health), 1 nru not nurtured by sucn surroundings in childhood r They make impressions too vivid and too universal not to have been intended by an all-wise Providenco ns a blessing to improve. Schools should be where there ore trees, streams, mountains teacherB for the play-houra as well. If I mav strengthen mv remark hv re calling what mado an impression on myself, I have for- gouon every circumstance ot a year or two that I was at school at Concord. New Hampshire, when a bov. ex cept the natural scenery of the place. The faces of my teacher and my playmates have long ago faded from my memory, while I remember the rocks and ed dies of the Merrimac, the forms of the trees on the meadow opposite Ihe town, nnd every bend of the river's current. Whether Governor Oglethorpe, in Joying out the city of Savannah, thought of more than the health and luxury in pnrhB and shade-trees, it is too late, perhapB to inquire but, to his beautifully rural plan, and energy of forecast in the completion of it, tho inhabitants aro indebted I believe, for a perpetual teaching of moral beauty, no less than for a sanitary luxury. KOSSUTH AND MAZZINI. The European correspondent of the New York Tribune says the proclamation to ihe Hungarian soldiers, purporting to be by Kossuth, is a forgery, ns ho wns opposed to the Milan movement as premature. , it ib also BBid lhat he will not formally deny its au thenticity, as it might discourago tho men who are implicated in the late movement. This correspondent thinks Iho rising is not yet disnoBed of. and that we shall soon hear more ol it. Meanwhile we give the proclamations of Koiiuth and Mazzini as they came to us: KOSSUTH'S PROCLAMATION. The folh wins document which nrofeasea to lis n proclamalioti oddressed by M. Kossuth to the Hungarian soldiers in Italy, has been published : IN THE NAME or THK HUNGARIAN NATION. TO THE SOL DIERS QUARTERED IN 1TAI.T. Soldiers; Cormudes! My activity is unlimited. 1 am about to fulfill rny intent. My intent is to free my country, to make her independent, free, and happy. 41 is nm uj iuruo wo nave oeen crusued. 1 ne torco ot he world never have sulhced to crush Hungary, f reason atone did it. I swear that force shall not conquer us, nor tronson injure us again. Our war is the war of the lihenv nf the world, and we are no longer alone. Not only the whole peop'e of our own country will be wilh us. not only will those once adverse to us now combat with us the common enemy, but all the peoplo of Europe will arise and unite to wave the banner of liberiy. By the force of the peoples of the world Iho totlering power ol the tyrants shall be destroyed. And ibis hall bo Uiu loot nut. Iii tliis war no nation fraternises more witli tho Hun garian than ihe Italian. Our interests aro one our enemy is one our struggle is one. Hungary is the rigid wing, and Italy the left wing, of the army head. The victory will bo common to both. therefore, 111 the immo ol my nation, have I made alliance with the Italian nation. The moment wo raise ttie banner of Iho liberty ol the world let the Italian soldier in Hungary unite witli the insurgent Hungarian nation, and the Hungarian soldier in Italy unite wilh insurgent Italy. Let all, wheresoever tho alarm shall be Bounded, combat against ihe common enemy. Whoso will not do this, be, the hireling of our country s executioner, snail never more see ins native land. Ho shall be lorever exiled as a traitor, us one who has sold the blood of his parents nnd ot ins country to the enemy. Ihe moment ol the insurrection is at hand; let not at moment find the Hungarian unprepared ; for uld it take them unprepared, should our nation not 1 friends, who have perished in nnconsoled weeping for tucu iuvvu diicf, imprisoned, exiieu.uutcnerea Dccauso ney uau not, nut desired, a country. Remind ymir young minds of thought outraged and restrained, of iho gieat traditionary past of Italy which they can continue onlv bv action, of the absolute no thingness of tho state they aro now in they the de scendants 01 ine men who have twice given civilization to Etiropo. Remind the soldiern of Italy of ihe dishonor of a servile uniiorm which the ioreigners derido, of the boiieB of their fathers left on the battle fields of Europe fur tho honor of Italy, of the true nlorv which crowns the warrior for right, for justice, for nation- amy. boldiers, women, youilis, people! let us have for the momont but ouo heart, one thought, one desire, one cry in our bouIb, one cry on our Una. " We will have a country wo will have un Italy ; and an Italy shall Attack, break at ovorv noiut the lona nnd wenlt linn of the enemy. Prevent them from concentrating themselves by killing or dispersing their Boldiers, do- atroying rontla and bridges. Diiorganizo them by striking at their oflicerfl. Ceaselessly pursue fugitives; be at war with the knife. Make arms of the tiles of your houses, of the stones of the streets, of the tools of your trades, of the iron of your crosseB. Spread the alarm by watch-fires kindled on every height. from one end of Italv to the other let tho alarm-bell of the people toll the death of tho enemy. Wherever you are victorious, move forward at once to the aid of thoBe nearest vou. Let the insurrection grow like an avalanche, wherever the chance goes against you ; run to the gorges, the mountains, the for tresses given you by nature. Everywhere Ihe battle will have broken out j everywhere you will find brothers, and. strengthened bv tho victories gained elsewhere, you will descend iuto the field agniu the day after. One only be our Hag the 11 a g of the nation. In pledge of oar fraternal unity, write on it tho wuros uoo, aim ine peoplo they alono are poweriul 1 to conquer, I luy alone do not betray. It is the Re-j publican flag which, in '48 aud '49 saved the honor ol ' Itnly t it is the (lag of ancient Venice; it is the flag of I Rime eternal Rome, the sacred metropolis, the temple of Italy and of the world ! I Purify yourselves, fighting beneath that flag. Lot the Italian people urise, worthy of llio God who guides them! Let woman be sacred ; let ago and childhood be sacred ; lot properly be sacred. Puuish Ibe thief us an enemy. Use for insurrection ihe arms, powder and uniforms taken from the foreign soldiers. To arms, to arms ! Our last word is Ihe bottle cry Let the man you have chosen to lead you send forth to Europe, on iho morrow, tho cry of victory. For tho Ihilion Committee. JOSEPH MAZZINf. AURELIO SAFFI. Mnurizio Qu irdia, Cesore Agoslini, Secretaries. (Horrcspcmocnce. The Convention I ts Candidates-Public Folioy, Measures, fiw). Bank Taxei in Cleveland-A Contrast. Ct.EVKi.AKD, February 28, 1853. Tho large and respectable number of delegates present at the State Convention, on the 22d the harmony of feeling existing the determination of spirit manifested lo fling to (he breeze once and again the glorious " old banner," ihit wus but lately trailed lt-feat and the character of those put In nomina tion for the Buffrages of the party, give general satisfac tion hero, and have awakened a desire that will not let the election of October go by default. Tiie popularity of Mr. Barrkre, 111 bis own district, Is a Biillicient guarantee lo iho peopleof the Stato of the correctness of his political opinions, and his worth ns a man. Campbell, Storer, Deuuisou, Galloway and Olds ave many and warm friends on ihe Reserve and the friends of these gentlemen will not fait to give a warm and cordial support to a candidate foe Governor, who received the fliirnuti-l)emocratic votes in his district for Congress, last fall. At the election, next October, our Slnlo and its af fairs will claim our undivided attention. It is indeed Stale election, entirely disconnected from nny Na- ional issues. It is a homo matter, fir home interests; tid in view of tho action of those who now bold tho reins of our Stato Government, it is expected lhat ev- ry man will feel liko doing his duty. expeditions after expeditions 1ms been fitted out to I pllOBC brotherhood, unity and hone, nnd in all the of ourcoinmoii humanity. Follow me, friends, 11 111. lor ctir Juiin: iney go way up among notarized : t..i t nears ami n.ce-uergs, and snuer amai.ng y nom emu , fiw Econoinil,t ihen conducted his neigh- and unger. Wot do hoy t;.ke to look for him with 1- . . , , . , , . . . f f ' J. . 7 . .. . . .. :: ' a . . combustibles at Ibe loot ol nirh troe. I hen without uai uiey mat's: (abuioiu rngiisnmau, wno uau .1 r...,i, 1 1 . 1. ... l,,rl,..lL.cpbylb.fir..l,..ru,ip,.nedl,i.o,... . nml L " d : , ...'.' WBr. biirnU .. h ,.r' 'i'nX' ninl llnti Witut tu i nti attain 1 lV'na '1 ' ' . , m, jimmy, 111.7 i,. 1 i timiw , . .,,.,,,, 0 ,, ., cria in rimh , , iiikv wiiii 1 ft iinnnmi ..... ... once, linked arm in arm, with Public Economy, de- to that (pointing to ihe picture,) lo see a oncoinmoll distance, and consequently could detect Sir John's vessel, prowiding ho alill sur wives Jimmy seemed really frightened when he had finished his speech: ho had tho look of a mnn who had gone a little too deep into science, and had made himself liatde to some scientific inquisition. I hazarded the remark, that a telescope eighty-three feet long would not onlv be inconvenient on board of a craft, but would possess no superiority over one of ordinary size, nn account ol iho convexity nt the water. Uut 1 w promptly nnd deservedly 'put down1 by a cutter, file-cutter, and the man who hail been slumbering by the fire. Jimmy Pond rubbed his forehead with a red handkerchief, aud seemed to feel that he had mado a splendid discovery, and if his friends felt disposed to buck it up, they could do 10 There 1b a satirical hit in (he following which 'biles rewdly t LAT Of Till DISCONTENTED. scending from the clouds to roast apples! Go home, my friends and follow my exnmplo, and then com mence tho iiroiltiction of hals, boots, shoe-peas, pig- iron, sheetings, pilch-forks, or suspender, or other subjects of national wealth; fur is it not manifest, that il you roast your npplo trees in May, your apples win grow already roasted in uctouer i DESCRIPTION Of SAVANNAH, nr n. p. wilms. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES 0i o'clock, a. m. Bills read a third time. 'Senate bill to authorize reli gious societies to sell real estate. Passed yeas fl!), ays 1. Hume bill supplementary tn the corporation act (al lowing turnpike companies lo incrrnse iheir stock). Passed yens (il, nayt 7. Mr. I.y'le gave notice ol his intention to introduce bill lo provide a mansion lor iho uovernor. Mr. Demi n a, Irom the committeo on Finance, whom was referred House bill No. 172, reported the same back, and recommended that the House disagree to Striate amendments. fThisia ilm bill striking nut the 1100 exemption clause of iho tax bill. Iho Senate amended by ex- emntinL'7o.l Mr. Damon moved to amend the netiute amendment by striking out 175 and inserting f.r0. Division de miuided, nnd the House agreed to strike nut $75 yeas r1, nava U. The question then turning un inscrliug .0, It was lost yens III, nays 42. Mr. Busline)! moved to insert $23. Agreed to yens 10, nays At. Mr. Sht'lluhnrgar inovtd to amend so lhat such cx emptioii should operate only in favor of I hose who bad no other property. 2A 0 clock, 0- tn Mr. O'Neil opposed the amendment of Mr. Sheila- birger, ns being unconstitutional, since the const ilu Hon required the exemption to apply lo each lndv viilunl. Mr. Shnlliihargor defended tho constitutionality ol lus amendment, and re I erred to the laws relating t cities ot the 1st and lid class, aa Instances where 1 In Legitlnturo hmt legislated wilh respect to cerlnii classes and not to ihe whole. The amendment wns lhs.ii agreed tn yeas IU, nay 33. Mr. Morgan moved to amend by requiring nil pro perty exempted 10 be valued by the ussessor, and re uirni-u ny mm io ine cnumy nuonor. i.obi. The amendment of the Senate as amended by tli House, was ihen rejected yeas nays 44. Rrports of Select Committee. Mr. Ward, of Crawford, reported back the bill 10 compel railroad coin tiles to fence their mads, with amendments, not re- quiring companies to fence their roads, but render! ni them liable for damage done to stock where roads are not lenceu according to previous laws, Mr. Oest moved to lay the bill on the tabte to bt primed. io. I must record, for invalids, that It was cool at Sa vannab cool enough for an invalid's great coat on the evening ot May the second. I had Imped better things of it. An old gentleman, 1o whom I sat next nt Ihe tea tahio, said it wm too cool tor nis daughter to leave her room. Ho was on his way with her to some more thermal resort in Honda, ot which 1 have lor gotten ibe name, A pale lady in blanket shawl sal opposite me. A summery and healing association coinrfl up usually with ihe mention 01 oavatinati, ihr namo being descriptive of a perennial feature of South ern scenery; and doubtless the general average of its temperature deserves it. Its caprices should be gunrd-od against, however. It has long been tho first refuge of the alarmed consumptive, and its history truly writ ten, would probably bo that nt a " midge ot Sighs," hy which many had returned tn health, and as many had passed on to remediless confirmation of disease. The bed-room candle, offered me by Prudence alter tea, was outvoted by a brilliant moon out of doors- fa "tie-vote," ot cntirBo, nn (lie republican principle, but tho individual moon, to my thinking, being a ma jority over (he Individual candle) aud 1 started tn get a hrst view ol savannah while sue was probably looking ber best. It was indeed a glorious night. And a more singular scene, than lhat city first seen by moon light, is not likely to fall often in the traveler's way, It IB taia 0111 curiously, am mo guiou uook lens us plan a chequer board, and every other square a park lnP( but tho stroets, besides, being unou wnn trees, anu avenues being pianteu iiirougu 1110 centre 01 ine principle ones, tho leaves form a complete ceiling over head, and no two stars at e risible at a time, 1 should ny from any side-walk or thoroughfare in the entire municipality. 1 have aomoiimes leit, in tho woods, 1 desire to climb up some lull tree and sre out and th snmo feeling comes ovor oue, after a while, in walking along miles ol a cioseiy-cnequorod carpet 01 light and shndo, with a root a cioseiy-cuequcred and intermi nable above, it occur ml to me whether we migli One of ihe conn lies of the Slate of Conned i( ut. ( 1 as not leave nut the sky a little too much, occasionally, ii wn Hra informed and believed boasts of a Juilgo who. lour improvements anil beautifying. though pool I j furniihed with those little refinements Whether these overshadowing trees act on the city usually met with in polished society, is an energetic, like the outspread hnud witu wincn a mother says irdwtl man. ami n nrnmiiinB lawver. A ne 11 ibor 01 " n is 1 10 iter cuiiurou, 111 iiiMmmiun 1 oui. his. some weeks ago. wns about to give awnv his that some peculiarly nuielizitig influence is exercised daughter In marriage, and having a deep-rooted dislike on Ihe habits and character of iho inhabitants, must tn the Clerical proiesaion, anu being ueierm'neu, as no ue tne stranger s .nvnrmum nuiruNiuu uiuuuu ue aaid. ' lo have 110 infernal nnrson in his house ho seut misht balance between this explanation nf it. and tli tor Ins Iriend, the judge, to permrm ine ceremony, town growing conaiu'rmu, uun iu inn anuumg ot The Judge came, and the candidates tor the connubial doers, irom its long use ns nicccn 01 invalid. Br vnk-n ink ma their nlnros hnlore him. he llitis addressed still a place, it seemed to mo, I had never been in be- tli. bridn t Y.iti swear vnti will tnnrrv this man f ' fore. Constantinople, with no wheels in its streets. Vn4.air'waa ibn rnnlv. 'And vou' (to the bride- and Venice, with its silent-eliding gondolas, are mnsv groom) 'swenr you will marry this woman f ' ' Well) tu Savannah. It is true that (he deep sand of every I do Baid the groom. 'Then, snys ihe Judge, ' 1 ihnrougiiiare mnKes cans anu carriages unhenrd, an swear you re marnedr 'A very excellent citizen ol the prolusion 01 leaves may so thicken the air as this iiln.ee writes the friend who sends us the above, deaden the common reverberations but there is 'whose benevolence is proverbial in an the region stillness more ueep ami universal man can thus obvi- round about, and who likes In refer lo his sell-made ously be accounted lor. 1 wus mere three Sundays-fortune, was the other dsv sivini counsel to a young f week dnva behaving themselves liko Sundays, th it friend, in whoso welfare he look imicti interest. 'Rely to say and tho hush of this first evening, which I on it, young man he said, ' there 11 tide in llio al- was inclined in nitnmue pnruy 10 strict observance ot fairs of men which, as Slmkspeare says, if taken at 1 the Sabbath, was, 1 afterwards found, the perpetual low tide, leads them on to fortune That quotation is I habit of the people. In my two hours' ramble, I more ttian equal to another I came across recently ma 1 passed through whole sireeis wimom meeting a 10111. newspaper, by which a well-known passage from the 1 1 scarce saw ten persons altogether, in the two hours. bible was msde in rrnu : ' r irsi take ine beam out 01 1 1 nmaing iue uomea sumim uo mouor, mr ine ine nm thine own eye, and then thou shalt see clearly te stick stirring abroad, I looked for open windows and lighted in ihy brother's !' By ihe way, I waa pleased with a rooms but a sign, even of a single lamp in the front touching description in your 'Editor's Table' Inr Jan-1 apartments ot houses, was strangely rare. There was uary, of a blind girl's restoration of sight ; but It struck I everywhere tho shut up look of families absent. For me rauier queer ly, mat sne snouia express ner astou-1 long aisuuces 1 saw numiuq w uiaiuru uie iuea iorci- isDmeni inai 1119 aoewr wis so wnue. using norn my suggesieu py mo okucsiivo luuago anu mo luneu- Oh, tell ma not or happiness, Cunfmitnnot,' anil turn aiutfl I wsnt a lot of thins; lo blfia My Ills, just now so touro. I wsnt s younjrr wife, or two, WHif duelled, fsir; Minn's pant, and (though fondly truo) hoilns tu lose hor hair. t sigh for slstlna, pnwir, nd fame ; Ol WMllh I want 'a liespi' I would not mind much how It camp, Nor who It cauied to wrap. I wsnt, whn itrnttim on my way Willi clothing rlrh and rare, To ha folks Idt llirir bats, and say, ' That's tho frost millionaire I ' ' I'd lihn a splendid hnute to buy r'ltth ATriiuo or soj And hate my mentals: then I'd cry, You fellows I Coma I' or ' (lo 1 1 Then In snmn churrb IM havn s pew, The creed no mutter which ; His cnihlons should hn soft nd new, Tho confregaiion rich I I'd have rare food, and ptatc, and llnrsns and carriage grana; Pictures and rmi and ttsmes fine droit rings upon my hand. New F.ra t haats thy coming day ; Kqualityl bruio; 'T Is lime tin rich hive had their day For yrinciftti to win. 1 Y laws that make as poor men cower, Ynur tlmn'a ui'tr up, I think, l.tt'i itmi our club mrru la an hour, I'll go and Uko sdilnkt improve the opportunity, our dear country would be lost forever, and our national h)g would be covered ith ignominy. . know that every Hungarian is ready tor the war liberty. The blood shed by tho martyrs, the suf- rings ol llio country, have chanced oven children into tioroos. No nn'ion yot rewarded its brave sons so liberally ns lie Hungarian nation will reward hers. After tho vic tory, tho State property shall bo distributed among the army, nnd ine lammes 01 the victims 01 patriotism ut the coward ami the traitor shall die. And I, Iheretoro, make it known to you, Boldiers, in be name of the nation, lhat whoever brings yoti tins, iy order, is expressly sent to you, that he may report 1 mo tin' lavori rs 01 utieriy 111 tne army stationed 111 nlv. lhat he may (ell you, in my mime, bow von hoiild organize yourselves. Accept ihe instructions that are forwarded to you by ibe nation, through mo, nnd follow them. Let it be so in every town und district of our own country and everywhere. Bravo ones! The Honveds and the Hussars have covered with glory ihe name of our nation. The world looks upon the Hungarian (lag as (he banner of liberty. We will preserve that glory and satisfy that expectation. It la principally on yon mat me eyes ni 1110 world aro turned, for your number is great. The arms nre in your bauds; a generous blood in your veins I the love of the country, and the thirst of vengeance on her executioners ia in your breasts. Your tusk is glorious and easy; for you are among a nation which will; give Its own millions of combatants against Austria. From Rome to the Island of the Sicilians from the Sava to the country beyond the Rhine all ibe poo pi nre unanimous in a cry, joined to ttie clang of million of arms. Let God be our judge. Down with the ty rants! Long live the liberty ot the people! Long tive our country : isravoonea! uy this cry your voice will he Itki Joshua s voice, at the bidding ol which the Jericho tyrants shall fall. So I order, in the name of ihe nation. Let every one oney. 1 win inorny ue among you. au revotr. God be with you. KOSSUTH. February, 18.J. ' currency is wholly and entirely a commercial one, snd will regulate itself, u the value of flour and pork are regnlated. It is time that " Banks aud Bank Reform" were taken nut of the aronn of politic in Ohio. The war upon our currency, and against our banks, has been waged by demagogues, for base and only selfish purposes, aud for place and power. It is time the people understood it so. It is time they looked upon demagogues, who moulli the words, " Banks and bankers, chartered rights and chartored privileges," a men who deem far more of a place for themselves, than they do of the welfare of those whose prejudices thoy would inflame, aud whoso passions they would excite, by political chicanery, aud by drawing pictures from (he imagination, of outrageous and grievous wrongs, which another party would impose upon the " dear people." However much parties may differ whatever may bo iheir measures of public policy, this much is true they fall on all alike. Whatever policy or law will benefit one farmer, or mechanic, or tradesman, iu Ohio, will nocessarily benefit all the rest. And whatever will injure the one, will injure the others. Our inter ests, as n poople, nre inseparably connected. They are one and the same. Wise, wholesome, judicious measures wilt promote them. And it is for the people lo see to it that a pnrty is put In power who will advocate and adopt such measures. It is ever base and unmanly, for the men of any party, to excite by misrepresentation, nny portion of the people against any class engaged In a useful and legitimate business. Money, everywhere, has more or less power. It creates for itself power, as learning and genius creato for themsolvos power. The demagogue knowing this fact, seeks to arouse passions, and excite prejudiceB agaitiBt monied institutions. The nomocracy of Ohio have been hard at work in this miserable business. They have over-acted. Let me show up in ihe matter of taxes on our banks in this city, the spirit of Democracy In Ohio. That spirit is opposed to the best interests of our people, as it tends to drive away instead of inviting capital to our Slate and it is wrong, because it makes unequal tho burthens of taxation. Art. 12, Brc. 3, of the Oonsiittition of Ohio, says: " Property employed in bunking, shall always bear a burden of taxation equal lo that imposed 011 the property of individuals." Now let us look at the figures of bonk taxes in this city. The following are the taxes assessed by Democracy upon ihe banks iu Cleveland : Assessed. Commercial Br. Bank, . City flunk Merchnnta Br. Bank,... Canal Bank , Forest City Bank, $-VKM01 .131,1! 17 , 4(1(1,021 402, y in . 31,217 Taied. $10,IU7 55 7 0,G15 02 7 7,240 43 4 8,378 72 4 5(iG 47 3 Total, tlp!)8a,4:,2 f35,998 21 5 Is there any justice, equity or constitution in such a tax imposed on our banks 7 Tho five bauks above named have Cipitul paid in $125,000 00 0 Tax 35,998 21 5 Amount of merctionts' and manufacturers' capital, moneys and credits, in ibis city in 1852 1,373,330 00 0 Tax 24.857 27 3 Now, let any man for a single moment look at this enormous wrong, and ask himself tho question, why $425,000 of capital, invested lu banking, in fur 11 idling a safe and convenient currency for the purpose of business, should pay a tax of $11,140 94 2 more lhan is paid on $1,373,330 invested in trade, manufactures, bonds aud mortgages, in private banking and exchange, &c.f A man has only to look at these figures and be satisfied of the open and gross violation of the constitutional rule of taxing banks. Tho amount of merchants' capital, manufacturers' stock, and moneys und credits in this county, entered on the duplicate for taxation in 1852, was $2,049,065. Tho bank lax is some $5,000 more lhan is paid on Ibis whole amount. Let us look at a few cases of taxes paid by individu- MAZZINPS PROCLAMATION. The following proclamation was posted all over M an, ana has ucen aprond in other pans of Italy : ITALIAN NATIONAL COMMITTEE. Italians Brothers ! The Mission of the National Italian Committee is ended; your mission begins. T day the last words which wo, your brothers, utter you is " insurrection to morrow, mingling wilh the raiiKs 01 1110 people, we win aid you to maintain it. Insurrection I Tho moment matured, panted f three long yenrs, bus arrived. Let us seize it. It not deceived by appearances 1 be uot misled by tin cowardly sophistries ol lukewatm men. iho eniu surtnee ot Jburope, irom Spain lo our own land, tun (ireeco to holy Poland, i a volcanic crust, beneath which sleeps a lava which will burst forth in lorronts at Ihe upheaving or Ilaly. Four years ngo, the Insurrection of Sicily wns followed by ten Europonn revolutions; twenty European revolutions will follow yours all bound by one compact, nil sworn to one fraternal aim. We have friends oven iu tho ranks of armies who rule us; there aro entire people whoso alarm cry will answer to yours. The national democracies of Europe lorm oue organized camp, vanguard ot ine greni army of tho people, fearnoUolalion. The luitiutivo ol Italy is the initiative nf Europe. Insurrection) Sacred a ihe thought of country that consecrates iM strong in will aud iu concentrated energy as its aim, which is justice, amelioration and free fratei mil life for nil ; let it rise and convert martyrdom into victory. Tho thousandsof victims who have f ill-oti with tho sacred name of Ilaly on their lips, deserve this at our hands. Be it tremendous as ihe tempest on our seas. Be it obstinate, immovable as the Alps which surround you. Between the Alps and tho extreme Sicilian sea aro twenlv-hve miliums ot us, and a Hun dred thousand torcijniers. It is iho struggle, of a mo ment, il you do but w ill. Insurrection! Let the grand word lea j from eity to city, from town lo town, from village to village, like the electric current. Arouse, arise, awnka to the cru-aado fever, all ye who have Italian hearts Italian trms. Remind the poople of their unjust tune rings, their riehta demied them, their ancient power, and the great future of liberty, prosperity, education and equality they may conquer at a uounu men of the State ; aud it is their duty to render good account of themselves when the day of action comes; and I trust they wilt. With wise and judicious legislation, the future of Ohio will be proud and glorious. And it is the duty of every young man lo feel a deep and anxious solicitude for the honor nnd prosperity of the Stite. Wo have old men to counsel us; aud guided hy heir experience in our State matters, wo need not go astray. It cannot be said of our candidates that they are old aud hacknied politicians. Thoy are alt new men to ihe great mass of tho people. Mr. Barrere has been hon- ired by the peopleof his dtstiict as one qualified to represent them in the Halls of our National Legisla ture. Dr. Allen has never been in any public official position. I huve known him many years. He I: gentleman of highly cultivated mind of fine literary taste of extensive reading nn effective speaker, and ploisingnnd popular manner. Mr. Van Vorhes Is pop Inr iu his own county; has boen fully endorsed by the people, and has shown himself a safe legislator and be Is a " good fellow." Mr. Brsclnnan comes recommended by the business men of Hamilion, ns an intelligent and enterprising German citizen. Mr Gib sou made his mark during ihe last cimpaign, and won for himself an enviable reputation. Mr. Waddle is a practical engineer, just such a mnn as our public work need, who will not play demagogue over bridges, nor degrade himself and his Stato by mob manifestos nnd recommendations. The nomination of K T. Barkm for the bench is a judicious one. The Judiciary of our State cannot bo guarded wilh too much care. It should bo composed of able and homst mon. F. T. Backus la 0110 ol the best luwyers, o bis Bge, in the State. He litis won his wny lo distinction un lidt'd and alone, by the force of his own mind by strict lutegnty of character by perseverance and m dualry. In eatly life Mr. B. wns left an orphan, and liis widowed mother found for hun a home wilh farmer, with whom he lived for several year. Hi young mind desired knowledge. Ho wn fond books and study ant prepared himself for Yale Col lege, nf which venerable inilltutioii ho is a graduate. Ho worked his way through, leaching lit winter, thui earning funds to pay expenses. In 1811(1 he came stranger to our city, entered Ins name as a student iu the office of Messrs. Bolton & Kelley, ami opened select school, to obtain means of support. Some ol llio most promising young men in our cliy were hi scholars, and will bear testimony to his thoroughness and capacity. In two years he was admitted to the Bar, and saou after was elected Prosecuting Attorne; and was one of the best Prosecutors this county ever had. He was afterwards elected tu Iho House aud Senate of Ohio, and won for himself a good reputation Mr. Backus is a thorough lawyer Is ambitious in Ii profession, and determined to place himself in its first rank. He will do bo. He lu iudomitahle will and energy is capable of long and laborious investtgatii is a good scholar, and a hard student. If olected ihe Bench, Mr B. will toko wilh him a personal char acter Hinullicd and pure a mind well and thoroughly versed in the prltciplea, ami sharpened by the practice of law, to which are ndded habits of industry ami d nity of diameter. I have known Mr. B. long and we! To his cHro may the people of Ohio, iu unlimited c-m fidence, placo life, reputation, liberty, nnd properly Never would the ermine of the Bench bo foiled on him. The three pitrtios in Ohio have tluir candidates tho field, nnd are now nil faitly before the people. The Whig policy In Ohio is one under which our State has prospered. (I gave lo the Stale a sound cur rency, a wise and judicious tax law, ami n system internal improvements, under whose Influence iho snurcos of our State aro developing, at d from wbii our people are in coming yenrs to reap rich anil abn dant harvests. The lenders of tho Democracy u and ore fighting our currency ; they opposed by mi representation, ridicule, and derision, iho Whig tax law, and they intended to ctipp.e and destroy our in ternal improvements. It is a singular fact, that tli peopleof Ohio have placed in mwcr a party whoso aim and policy have been oppmrd lo their best inter ests. But so it Is. Go now tn any rational man iu the Slate, nnd usl him if a mixed currency is not necessary lo Ibe trans action of the biuiness nnd co nnieice of ihe State Ask bitn If the Whig tax law wus not correct In general principles and features f Ask him il our internal improvements, our cunul, our Me Adam roads, our plank roads, our rnilronds, nre not of untold bene, fit to our peoplef Aud he will answer eieh of Ihese questions In iho ntllruuitivo. And these aro Whig measurrs. As to tho currency and banks, a political party has nu more to do with them, than it has to do wi:h (he Tak 633 50 Amount of sales last year 400,000 00 J. G , capital assessed $10,101 00 Tax 291 42 Amount of sales last yenr, some 300,000 00 B.'s capital assessed $5,000 00 Tax 90 50 Amount of stiles, about 130,000 00 doing wHtatiaitt tMI.. mm Remind your women of the mothers, the sisters, the price of a barrel of flour, or a hog. The question of I have made this exhibit for the purpose of showing Democracy in Ohio. It is indeed a beautiful exhi bition. The banks never will pay these taxes. They never ran bo colli cted. There is not a court in the tale lhat will not decide in their favor. Democracy conventions, in resolutions, in legislatures, In pick 's, and chisds, and crowbars, and on the slump rampant and roaring, ifluminnting its votaries, Is one ng ; but before courts nnd juries, where it has to al with law and facts, it is quite another thing. These demagogues havo no influence; their word 00 power; and when thrown into the scales of justice, y are soon "tossed In air. There was much truth In a remark made to me a few years ago in Columbus, by a distinguished Demo crot. In speaking of the legislation of onr State, he said : " Nothing has been legislated for in Ohio, for the last ten years, but Hanks and Democracy." He was tdrt. Yours, iruly, Quivino, HEW YORK CITT COUNCIL. Niw York. February 28, 1853. Notwithstanding tho clTurts mado by the Al- lermen to throw difficulties in the way of the Grand Jury in their investigation of the charges of malfeasance against members of the Common Council, certain facts were elicited which being male public, have fully confirmed the reports ao long current in reference to the corrupt doings of this last named body. Such a presentment as that now before us probably reveals a worse condition of things, in connection with our city government, than mnuy wero prepared to learn, even among those who were well aware that honor and up rightness had no place among the men to whom the nteresls of our metropolis have of late been commit ted. We are furnished with ihe proof that bribery to a great extent has been usrd to obtain of the corporation such grants or privileges, as they, on the part of tho city, were empowered to bestow. W boever wished them to lake any official action, in any matter of importance, had to hand in for distribution, such aam-snlcration as they saw fit to name. An individual want ed suppressed a report relative to a Wall street pier to effect this ho had lo pay to an Alderman five hun- I red dollars. Another applied for the Catharine street ferry l when the grant was before the Board ofAsiis. 1 Btils he was oalled on by one of the members and told that unless he paid five hundred dollars, no favorable action would be tnken. He acconlinglyorArd wr (he amount and received the grant. Afterwards the tame Assistant Alderman wailed upon him again and de manded three thousand dollar for his services In the matter 1 hut he was rather late, for the grantee having (he business already settled, declined any further pay mont. TheOsixevonrt street property was sold for $100,000. It came out before the Grand Jury lhat the sum of $300,000 might have been obtained for the same prop, erty, from another applicant. He gave notico, before tho Bale, that he wanted It ut that price. The pre eminent says, " it was clearly shown that enormous sums of money have been e upended for and towards the procurement of railroad grants in Ihe cliy, and that towards the procurement of the Eighth Ave nue llnilrond grant, a mm so lar o lhat would s'artle the incredulous, was expended ; but In consequence of the voluntary absence of important witnesses, the Grand Jury wns left without direct testimony of the particular recipients of ihe different amounts." If the Grand Jury had had more lime, other corrupt doing would no doubt have been brought to light. The foreman requested the Recorder to continue ihe inves'igatlon, ami it is to be hoped that lie wilt com ply. Ho Is authorised to summon witnesses, and can perhaps procure testimony which in this Instance was withheld from (he inquest through tho legal action of two Aldermen, titling ss judges, in ihe Court of Russians, The Grand Jury indicted Alderman Wesley Smith and Alderman James M. Bard, for misdemeanor. The presentment was read in the Court of General Sessions in whirh they, with tlm Hon. KecorderTillon, were Die presiding jtioges. 1 hey nsienea quite attentively lo ihe charges against them, but did not seem nt all dblurhed. Knowing the power of money with themselves, ibey perhaps think llieycnn use it to slave off Justice. But we hope that, if Ibis be ao, they will find themselves dereived. Yours truly, W. Peanut are raised in Immense quantities in Virginia. One comity in the State (Isle of Wight), realizes annually, by their sale, twu hundred and fifty thousand dollars.

ii ii in j i in ii i it I hi Ay VOLUME XLIII. COLUMBUS, OHIO, TUESDAY, MARCH 8, 1853. NUMBER 28. Y Uhdilg Olfto Statt Journal 19 PUBLISHED AT COLUMBUS EVERT TUESDAY BI0HN1NQ, IT 6G0TT ft BASCOM, JOOUfAL BUtLDIXOB, UtOU AND FUEL BTSlsrS XHTK1H0B OR UQ1. TERMS Invaritihty in advana: In Columbus, S2 00 ft Ttar) by mail, it GO ; club of four and upwards, 1.25 ; of ten and upward, Cl.00. TUB DA I LT JOURNAL la furuixhcd to city subwribersat M 00, and by mall at Jfi.00 n yoar. TUB TKMVEttiaY JOURNAL Is 93.00 ft year. RA TKS OF AD VER TISWoIn THE WEEKLY JO VRNAL 1 square, U SfJUartS, fl squnre, m column, M column, column. 11 iilli So ; So I So i o So ! So 9o So S l8o 60 761 001 251 753 253 604 006 000 608 00 761 2fil 762 '263 60 4 00 5 000 008 00 IX 1 00 1 'i !ifi8 604 606 000 608 0011. 17. 1 35 2 26 8 60 4 00 6 00 0 00 8 0010. 14. !. changeable monthly, KG a year ; weekly . ohauqpsnla quarterly , ohuigp&hle quarterly , , , , cuaugvable quarterly , 10 Hum of ttils itiod typo I rerkonnd a oquar. Advertlwmenrt orOeml on the Inrldo Mrhmlroly, doublo the. abovo rates. All leaded liotiwa charged double, and measured aa LT solid. 1)10 Ccgiriatuw. Monday, February iS, 153. IN SENATE. 9 o'clock, a. m. Mr. Hill offered a resolution, "that tlio Auditor of State be requested, at his earliest convenience, to report to the Senate the amount paid out of tho several county treasuries for the publication of laws of a general nnture ia tho newspapers in tlio several counties in this State in the year 1852," which was adopted. Mr. Hnwkins ottered n resolution requesting tho Auditor of State to report the amount of money now in the Stutn Treasury applicable tu llio payment of the principal and interest or the State debt. Mr. Wilson moved to amend by adding ulsn the nmoiint that will bo required to pay tho interest and principal falling duo on the first nf January next. Tho amendment was agreed to, mid the resolution adopted. Tho Sennlo then took a recess. 2 o'clock, p. m. ! The Senate wont into committee of iho whole Mr. Van Husk irk in the Chairand considered the general ordor. After some time the committee arose and re ported tho orders back, and they woro severally appropriately referred. On motion of Mr. Wilson, the bill to fix tho rate of interest and to prevent usury, was taken up, and Mr. Wnlkup moved its indefinite postponement. Wr, Wilson spoko against the motion, and rend o collocntinn of quotations from the " higher law," Mr. Gillett desired him lu rend something with which the Senate was nwo familiar, and Mr. Wilson complied iti an extemporaneous speech When lie had concluded, tho question was token, nnd the yeas and nays being demanded, reunited yeas 111, nays 0. So the bill whs indefinitely postponed. The bill to amend tlio tax law (reducing the amount of exempted properly to sevoiity-five dollars) was taken up, and iho question being on it;i piissitge, Mr. Hawkins ndled for the rending of the bill. Mr. Ctuliing in tho chair tho bill has been rend three times. Mr. Hawkins. have a right to dnmund the reading or the bill. Mr Cushing. There Is no law for reading a bill four times, I believe. Mr. Hawkins. I call for the rending of the bill. Mr. CiiHhiug. It has been moved and seconded tint the bill be read the fourth time. Is the Senate ngreed 1 Cries of agreed ngreed and grini laughter mid the bill was rend the fourth time. Mr. Johnston moved to recommit tho bill to a select committee of nno, wih instructions to strike out the exemption, which was lost yeas 11, nnys 14. And the bill passed yeas 21, nays 4. The Senators who voted in tho negative were Messrs. Alward, Finck, Joh ,stnn und I'm doc The Senate adjourned. HOUSE OF KEPltESENTATIVES. 9t o'clock, a. m. Reports of standing commit lea. Mr. Cockerill. from The uommitee on Corporation, reported back Senate amendments to the bill amending the general corporation law, and recommending disagreeing to the same. These amendments give existing corporations liberty to accept any of iho provisions of tl;e corporation b:l without accepting iho remaindor, and repealing tlio provisions of iheir chartorB inconsistent with the provisions accepted lleport agreed to, and Iho Senate amendments rejected yeas 4, nnyi 57. Mr. (iest, from iho Judiciary committee, reported back Sennte bill for the division id' the town of Sidem into two election precincts, and recommended its third reading. Agreed to. Mr. Hotik, from tho same committee, reported hack the bill regulating deacon M nnd the distribution ot per. on the tal sonal estates, without recommendation, nnd it was In id Also, tho bill authorizing trustees of townshtim to re ceive deeds of re d estate, in trust, with ati) nuiiinetiln, which were agreed to, and the bill ordered to a third reading. Abo, lh ? bill amending tho act creating a lien in fa vor oi mecnanics, and recommending agreeing lo Sen ate amendments. A cried to vena (if), nays 1. Alio, Iho bill to prevent thosdeol cemeteries, and recommended its iiioefiniio postponement. Agreed to. Mr. Suuih, from the committee on Finance, reported back the bill fir eMublishing an Institution for the support of Idiots, and recommended its postponement to January next. Agreed to. Mr. Honk, from tlio Judiciary committee, reported back Senate bill, supplementary to the act lor tho support of illegitimate children, and recommended its third reading. Kend the third time, and passed yens 02, nays 2. Reports of Stint Committees. Mr. Stowo n-ported back Iho bill to provide for the evils resuhiug from tlio traffic in intoxicating liquors, with nn amendment, inning out iho whole bill and inserting a new one. Laid on tho table to be printed. 2 o'clock, p. i. Mr. Itli, from tho rommittro of conference on the bill relating In Snto roads, made a report which wa agreed to by iho House yens M, nnvs ;t. Mr Hughes moved to luke up tho bill authorizing citioi to borrow money inr water work, pcIicmi! house, &c. Auroeit lo. The Senato nmoiidirciits were agreed toyeas .IS, nays 7. Mr. Plumb, from the committee on Schools, reported back the School bill, with several amendments, which were ordered lo be printed. Committee of the Whole. Tt House resolved lt.elf into a committee of the Whole, ami considered the amendments to tho Militia bill, and the bill regulating descents, and reported them back with sundry amend ments, and the hrst was committed to the select com' mittoe which reported them, and tun second was re ferred to the Judiciary committee, after a motion to postpone was lost. The bill lo extend the provisions of commissioners ot sewers to all the counties in tlio mute, was indefi nitely postponed. Also, Iho bill authorizing trensurors to refund tax in certain cases. The House then adjourned. Tnradnyt March 1, 1H.V.I. IN 8KNATR. 94 o'clock, a. m. The bill to limit the liability of oxec utors and ad' ministratori, and to amend the act to provide for tlio settlement of the estatrs of deceased persons, was rend tne iniru lime and passed. The Senate agreed to the report of the commitleu of Uonlerouce on the bill to provide lor the laying out nm establishing of State roads. On motion of Mr. Sherman, the bill lo provide against the evils resulting I mm the tralhc in lutoxicaiiug Ii qnora was tnken up, and The question being on agreoing to the motion of Mi Vattier to strike out the report ot the soloct committee on Temperance and insert a new bill, Mr. Sherman honed that if any rewect were to l shown to the wishes of that vnst number of petitioners who had loaded down tho tables of tho Senate, it would be shown in an intelligible way, and if the Senate was aisposea to pass a tun lor tne suppression ot mteinper. ance, u annum un me mil reported irom the commute Ho would not trouble the Sem.to with a speech uni tho subject, but thought the report infinitely superior to the substitute ui the gentleman Irom Hamilton, Mr. Cox regarded the Senate as only a representa tive ol the people, end thought the indications ol po ular feeling sufficiently manifest to iustify tint I.eci lature In enacting a stringent law. Ho would vote for the report, and aantnat the aubstituto. Mr. Kiddle advocated ihoamenilment of Mr. Vattier, and Mr Hawkins replied. Mr. H. defined his position to be in favor of a law of the strictest provisions, whenever be thought the tone of public sentiment in the State would justify or sustain it. Until that time ar rived he thought its enactment would be pernicio and would vote against It. Aftr further dnbftt, without taking the qtiesti, The Senate took a rncess. o'clock, ft. m The quest! in h'dny on striking out the amendment reported trom the commiltoe, it wa taken nnd lost, A oall of the Senate was then ordered, and 23 Seni tors answered to their names, The question Ihen recurrinir on strikino out the orl ginat bill ami Inserting the amendment of the com mi nee. Mr, Sherman moved the reference of tho whole subject to the select committee on Temperance, which was agreed to and the bill wai referred. The Senate than went Into committee of the Whole Mr. Rex in the Chair and considered the general calendar. After some litno the committee arose and reported the orders back, and they woro severally appropriately roierreu. Mr. Oradlebatiyli offered a series of resolutions re citing the resolves made by the General Assembly ol Ohio, on the 2'Jd dny of February, 1818, endorsing and approving (he course of the Hon. Thomas Corwin, in relation tu the wnr with Mexico attaching to them a scries of preambles, containing rumors false and scandalous pe remises, and closing witli the following resolution:"Therefore, be it Resolved, by (he General Assembly of the Statu of Ohio, That said resolutions be expunged from the journals of tho Senate Biid House of H"p's, and for that purpose the Clerks of the Senate Bd House shall bring the original manuscript record of the journals of their respective bodies tor tho session of 1810-7, before said brunches of the General Assembly, at such time as shall bo determined upon for that purpose, and in the presence thereof sin II draw black lines around suid reBolutioiiB.and writo across the face thoreof, in strong letters, the fallowing words : " Expunged by order of the General Assembly, this day of March, in the year ot our Lord ns.i,i llio tesolutioiiH were laid on Hie table, and ordered to bo printed. Mr. Crndlebaugh offered a resolution requesting tho Auditor of State to submit lo tho Senate tho account of Samuel Mednry for tho printing executed by him for the first session of the present Legislature. Mr. Ferguson movetl to amend by adding, "olio the reasons that induced the Auditor of State to refuse to audit the account," Tho amendment wns agreed to and the resolution was adopted. Tlio Senate then adjourned. HOUSE OF REI'KESENTATIVES. !4 o'clock, a. m. Dills read a third time. To provide for the purchase of stationery and fuel for the Stato, Passed yeas 57, nays 1. 8 on at o bill to divido the town of Salem. Warren county, into two election precincts. Passed yeas 55, nays 0. Sennte bill supplementary to the act for selling lands granted by Congress for the support of religion in the Ohio Company's purchase. Passed yeas iM, nay 2. Mr. Mills, from the committee on Hoads, reported buck the bill surrendering turnpike nnd plank rouds to iho counties through which they pass. Passed yeas !)fj, nays J. The flouiotook a recess. 24 0 clock, p. m. Mr. Kridor, from the atanding committee on Rail roads and Turnpikes to which was referred the Senate bill uuihorizing railroad companies to issue bonds nnd increase their capital stock in certain cases, reported tho sumo back without amendments, and recommended its p'isBage. Passed yens 29, nays 9. lieporl oj sftcet committee Mr lies', Irom the com mitten of Cuil.-reiice, reported hark Iho hill respecting tho publishing of tho laws, with amendments authorizing the county commissioners to contract at any price lor p-iblinliiiif; such taws as the Auditor, Probnte J mice and Proiecuting Attorney might select. Mr. a Neil opposed tlio adoption ol the report. Mr. Gout oxplniiied tho amendments. Mr. Ward, of Wurren, opposed iho report. Messrs. Casad and McCull advocated its adoption. Messra. Withrow, Davidson and Damon opposed it. The report was then re jc ted yens 23, nays 4G. Mr. Gust moved another committee of Conference. After a long discussion, the motion wns agreed to yeas till, nays II. t Mr. Hush reported back the bill providing for the appointment of guardians for drunkards, gamblers Ax, il recommended its engrossment. Mr. I.elilond moved iis postponement till Janunry ipxt. Agreed to. Mr. Blixs tittered a resolution requiring tho enmmit- t on Printing In report as nearly us possible tho cost Public I'Muting tins your. Agreed to. The bill for the creation of n Homo of Correction for juvenile offenders, wan taken up. Mr. Iiniond moved its postponement till Jannary xi. inrneu yeas .10, wiys ,'o. The lloiifo then adjourn d. Tui'sriiiy, ill 11 n il 'J, 18.13. IN SENATE. OA o'clock, a. m. Mr. Riddle reported back the bill lo authorize the holding of special terms of the Supreme Courts, with amendments, which wera agreed to, nnd tho bill was lost 011 its passage. 1 ho same gentleman reported imck the bill to au thorize suiu to be brought on written instruments in certain cues, without nmeudmeut, nnd the bill was lered in its third reading forthwith and passed. Also, the bill to prescribe the cIVect ol tender in certain casts, which was ordered to its third rending rUiwilh, and pasted. Also, tlio bill allowing writs of rorliorari from Courts of Common Pleas to Justices of tho Peace, in minnl cases, which was rend tho third time and passed. Also, 1 lie bill in reiuiioti 10 me exceptions 10 appeal ids uoloro Justices ot the I once, which wns ordered be read the third timo to-morrow. Also, tho bill relating to the entry and recording of recognizances in tlio Uourtsot umntniin t leas, which was read tho third timo nnd passed. Also, the hill to amend Die act relating to the orgn- nizntiuii of Courts of Justico, their powers and duties, ith amendments, which were agreed to, and the bill Tdcred to be read the third limn lo-morrow. (in motion of Mr. (illicit, iho vote by which the authorize the hold ma of special terms of the tipremo Courts wns lost, was reconsidered, ami (he The amendments of the Senate committee wero then agreed to yeas 44, nays 20. The bill was then ordered to bo enem ,!. Mr. Jonea roported back the bill to repeat the act exempting the homestead of families from sale on exe cution, and recommended its passage Mr. Ward, of Crawford, moved to postpone tillJan uary next. Carried veas 50. nnvs 9a Mr. Williams renorted back ! S.nntn hill on. lating the sale of nostrums, and recommended its post- un uniiuury next, uameu, Mr. Plumb moved to take up the school bill. Agreed to. The first nmendment, exempting cities and incorpo minx vinuues unvine a iinaru 01 CiUiicaiion irom 1 in jurisdiction of the township Hoard, was agreed to. 1 un second, third, tourth and tilth amendments were then agreed lo, being verbal. A motion was made to amend Iho sixth amendment, requiring an enumeration nf the voutb between ibe ages of live ami twenty-one yenrs, by striking out live nun omening iour. Lost yeas nays 4!J. Mr. Hamoco moved to amend nv rnntiirinff the anil ine rot ion to be made by tho Clerk instead of the Directors. Lost. Mr. O'Neil moved lo strike out Hie 20th and Slat sections, which provide fur the establishment of town ship High schools. Mr. O'Neil said, that in his opinion the common poo-pie should be Inxed onlv for ihe aonnort of common schools- If a higher education wns desired, let those pay mr 11 wno received it, Mr. Gest opposed the mntinn. These sections formed a most valuable portion of the bill. They furnished ine piorer class ot youth with the means of receiving a better education than the common schools furnished. and if government interested it sell in the means of uucituou ai nu, iisnuuid go to the extent Itirntshea by these High Schools. Mr. Plumb advocated the system nf High Schools as being more economical to tho lowmhips than to do woiioui inom, Mr. Ward, of Crawford, moved a recess till seven o'clock p. m. Mr. moved a recess (ill 94 0 .clock to-mor- Mr. Shellnbarger moved toadionrn. 11. nays 30. 00 the House adjourned. Carried yeas iKisccllany. bill was laid on iho tnU Mr. A hard reported hick the bill to regulate the foes of I'rotiilo Judges, with amendments, whirli re ngreed to, and Ihe bill p;isted. 2t o'clock, p. m. Tho bill suppleinenlary to iho act to provide lor tlio eniion and refutation 01 incorporated conn:itucswn read Iho third time, and passed. Also, the loll to repeal ceriaiu sections of nets there- imined, (the charter ni tne uoiumuus, nqua and Indiana Railroad Uouipanv;) which rimed. House amendments to the hill authorizum Iho re It 11 piistiuieiit 01 turnpike, ah Aunniizeu mm pianK roads to tho counties, towns, or Miles through which I hey pns, were ngroeti 10. Mr. hilhourn moved to taae tin iho mil to nrovidi r tho better orcimiznlion of the State treasury : which was agreed toi and ihe question being on agreeing to the amendments ol ihe select committee. Mr. Atkinson adverted to the speech ol Mr. Wilson, as published in the Ohio Statesman, and replied at the nri'ument of that xentleman and Mr. Mnnuen Mr. W tison replied ai cotisideraoio length, ami as a life-long democrat administered a severe rebuke lo the loitato real ol ihe henutor Irom Uarroll. Alter further debate, Mr. Kilhourn moved the previ ous question, and the yeas ami nays being demanded, worn ordered, nnd resulted yeas II, nays IS. So the previous question wns not sustained. A motion to commit to the committee on Privileges nnd Elections, was lost. A motion by Mr. Wilson to commit to a select com mittee of one was lost. A call of iho Senate was had, and 29 Senators an swered to their names. Tho question was then taken on the passage nf the II, nnd resulted yens 18, nays 12. Ho the bill psMctl. Mr. Wilson ottered a resolution, that no new bills bo introduced after Monday next, which wns agrenl to. 1 he Senate then adjourned. Idind, how had she learned to distinguish colors? nad n t that doctor an uxe to grind T ' ' Not knowing, can't suy.' A friend who lately took a husmnsa-trin to Pitts burgh and Cincinnati, expressed himself highlypleosed wilh the 'Queen Citvof the West' nlreadv so creat, and vet bo ranidlv increasing. He savs that 'it comes aa natural for tho young bucks of Cincinnati to talk of wiuh, ns 11 uoes tor tne utile children in rrauco w speak French. The incroasinn nrice of pies is dis cussed even in the parlors of the famous Durnot House-But he says ihe greatest place on the Ohio river is Pomeroy, or 'Coal Port,1 which has a continuous front of live miles on the river, and extends back as far you can see! Just below Parkersburg, Virginia, ns ue was rapidly moving down the Ohio in the beautiiui packet steamer Pittsbtirch. commanded by Cant. Hugh Campbell, he passed tho island rendered so famous years ago by tho connection of Aaron Burr wilh tho then owner of it, who had made it almost a paradise. He was informed by a fellow-passenger that that was uinney Hazard s island ; and he was tnrther entertained by a description of the sumntuous stvlo in which old Blanoy Hazard lived on that beautiful island in the unto 1 A lively Philadelphia contemporary, who, it is just possiuio, may have sumo musical mend who has uecn less successful before the public, wonders why Mr. Dempster, the distinguished Scottish vocalist, with songs and ballads oft-repeated, and 'simple' nt that, and with only the aid of a piano, 'shniild be able, night after night, to entertain crowds of Philadelpliiuns, in long succession.' The 'marvel' is easily solved : the people like his performances. In Albany, recently, Mr. Dempster returned over two hundred dollars, at tho door, to persons for whom thero wns not room in the largo hull where be gave his concerts' simple ' as they were. We aro glad again to hear from Professor Sphinx. Although ho speaks, aa usual, in allegory, yet ohservo how pungent he is; how bo ' keeps due on' and 'nover lets up' until his moral is educed from tho toughest nnd knottiest theme t NOViT. FARULE. BT O, SPHINX, MASTER OP ARTS, AND I. AT I! DIRECTOR OF A PLANK ROAO COM PANT. To tehich is adtlcd one anecdote, translated expressly for the Knickerbocker Magazine, from the writings of Diatoms Siculut. I. THK LION WITH A TENPKR CONSCIENCE. A gouty old gormandizer of a lion lay in his cavo on a litter of dead men's bones, glutting himself with tho blood of women and children, which his servants brought to him from nit quarters of the earth. An at- tendant announced lhat His Majesty's eldi st son, who had left tho paternal cave ninny years before to sunk his fortune, hail returned, nnd wished to pay his ro- spects to the Governor. "So that ungrateful 'ound has come back, has ho? cried the King of Beasts, mumbliug a baby's skull between his old filing molars. 'What does he look like, and be to him V Big and danuorous. voiir Majesty Ihe attendant said. ' He growls like the distant thunder, and cracks his tail like a cart whip. He is thought to look like your Majesty ' ' Hum 1' grunted the old lion. ' Show him in. But stop. Wot kind of a charucterdocshe bear? It seems to mo that we have heard some complaints ogainst him; which Is very odd, for I look partie'lar paint to teach him Ihe catechism myself, when he was a cub, and gave him lessons in humility overy Saturday I in gin.- "Oh, Sire Ihe attendant said, 'he generally be-j haves himself pretty well, considering: but he has I somehow got a liking for human flesh, and now and men eats up a man. Wot a ornhle and hextraord narv circumstance ! roared this old lion. Go fell the 'orrid young ennni-1 bal that I can' set my oyos on him without 'orror. Its 1 tchuo'orrid for belief! And after all his lessons in humility and the catechism, too! I can't be'old him I Bid him begon) but say to him, that my prayers are ' daily offered in his be'alf HOW SCIENCE AND POLITICAL XCONOMY, LINKED ARM IN ARM, ROASTED APPLES ON AN IKPROVKD PLAN. A certain Political Economist, who was alo an liure, being grieved ut the resent mode 01 roasting apples, 'ether one snrinir moruinu. nnd lressed them thus: I have Ioiil' inspected, my friends, that the mode of producing masted apples which Imb prevailed from theearliestagesdownto the present time, is attended with the most frightful waste 01 latmr, and consequently ol national wonuh. lam happy to Btato, that 1 have at laat been able to base my views on this sn Inert on the most sat in factory data continues m near mam until ne gets live or six on ma troV6r,ib,y t1Bt tll ammllt 0, Mmr mmlly Bn)lied : : . ' , ' , , r ' . , in the uniied otates to the procesi round ihe great shiny board until ult the 1 brnudys-and- waters nm numbed. Seen il repeatedly. Jimmy generally has plenty of patrons. Students, wrapped in shawls, and wearing slouched felt-hats, talking of ' Profs ' prayora,' and poetry, romance and recitations: ' Englishmen, drinking ' arfaud-arf,' and KNICKERBOCKER GOSSIP. The Editor's table of l his most sprightly Mag. iizino, is always rich, juicy reading. The alternation, from grave to guy, from tho finest touches of pathos to the most ludicrous pictures of fun, are not equaled by any magazine of tho day. We copy, as usual, a few of iho many goad things in that department: We derive iho following from a welcome correspon-'hl at New Haven, (Conn,) Tho sketch will remind tho reader, in some of its features, of Dickens' Parlor Orator : ' In our place (110 matter where) wo huve a nuiel Bugiyi alc-hoiieo, kept by an honest, nhittnute. and clever (American clever) old Johnny Bull,' whom wo will call Jimmy rond. Jimmy is just such another fellow aa old John Willet, of the ' Maypole' inn; comes down on a man in tho same way that John (before he went 'lo the Sulwanners'l used to comodown on Utile Solomon Daisy, when Solomon ventured to say that the moon rose at a certain hour: 'Never you mind about the moon. Don't you trouble yourself about her. You let iho moon alone, and I'll let you alone Now Jimmy Pond will interfere when a nartv of Gen tlemen are talking together when, too, Jimmy hasn't tho slightest idea of the topic with: 'Gents, allow me 10 correct yon ; 'ear what rve got to any hrst. And then he tangles himself up in a sentence without the slightest meaning ; a sentence that would make Jack Buushy (if Jack could bo p rest lit) nod Ids head with emphatic approval. But Jimmy has a cheerful read ing-room, capital old ' a huer, ' Punch, and all the Loudon papers, and above ult, when the night is cold and stormy, a glowing tiro in the grate: so 'peoples' unit) uiKt-ii no uiiuiiuo u itii. I 1 - . c .... . I ni I mil in riintiliR nfrncn i.: i" .VVi' Z "'i " S'-i . mmy T"" in the pre, is no one in but . mself: ouietlv sittin in n conmr. I . '8 " together one spring morning, and . ... . ' . llUi stealing a glance at Jimmy, now anil then, over ihe uupti ui a iiowcpnpi-r ur 11 puwier piut-poi. Ill ine middle of Jimmy's reading-room there is a large round table: at this table ho usually sits, with su think warm ' before him. Well, Jimmy takes a few sips of the lluid, and Ihen fancies he 'can a order' from a customer, and goes tn Ihe bar for unoilur glu. Ho d.sciMs.ng the men s ot ' Hobby ' Peel and Johnny , lhirty four cont, , , ,mv Russell, or perhaps lauphmg at IV sel, for .tenhag my friendB, not merely for tho pi 'a eulogy ' Iroui a i ranchman. All kinds of chnrac- toJynur view this appalling tact, lers round to Jimmy Pond's. processes of placing tho ap ples in pans, putting the pans into oyf-ns, and afterwards removing the tame, is sufficient, if employed in producing bats, bouts, suspenders, broom-slicks,darning-needles, shoe-pecs, or pitch-forks, or other subjects of national wealth, to augment tho aggregate wealth of Ihe country hy a sum total ot two hundred and twenty-sevon thousand one hundred and sixty-six dot- ive called you together, purpose of holding up your view this appalling tact, but also lor Iho pur pose of showing you how, by the application of acien- 1 was mm jimmy snoiue some time ago, looainc -,. ..- .1.' 1... ovnumb.roriho'lliu.tr;trdNow ilh mln' .J wlf,B , , v. ',11 uni n r pti Huiiiiiiiiiii .,. ""'K""- ,,m. timo miR-tintl,. ol Iho labur now nocewary t, cope,- Jimmy was -on me so arc 11 mroir jouii rnuiK 1 ,i, ,.-rt., i, ,ii-.ti ..it.a- f.i,....i. f lit. n.itl tl..... I .li(..l Im. .It.mllnr. I,, ill. liicr tnl.... V" " " , ... ... . - - " . n " I industry : nmnelv. to Mm nrtwlnrtion ot hats. shou-neia. ha tl nut inmnw nt linl hunt iilim luln III linftil. I i. ' ... ', ' v' ...i.fiL - .1 n -1 ... i p I 1- ,1 . 1 il-l 1 uapoiiuura, bbuuiuh, puny, rtu iiauiici, nnu BU'iorio, : . r ' 1 , 1 , 1 1 1 p 'j I greatly lo ihe mcreaie ol nniional wealth and the pro J .... r : , ,.' , " ' niotion ot hrt ness and stillness that it was a silent city, deserted oat undecayed, which the growth o) a luxuriant wil dernesfl had overtaken and buried. It is curious that it should be but "across a ferry' as it were, from Havana, the most oul-doora-y city in tne world, to Savannah, tho must tn-duors-y. it can not be altogether a matter of principle, though Savan nnh is said to be the most religious of towns, and Havana (where I heard tho military band play polkas as part ol the Babbath service), is perhaps as peculiarly irreligious. Nor can it be altogether a peculiar ity of racethough the Havanese would seem lo play the sun-full as naturally as ihe S&vannese play the oysior. there is n fashion which is part 01 the character of a town, ditl'ertng in different places to a degree which is not easily explainable in the amount of appearing abroad, ("gadding," as the straight-laced call it), which is respectublo and proper. The subject might profitably be lectured upon. Inestimable as the fireside virtues are, domestic bliss requires a cer iaiu amount ot airing, in "best-regulated lamiltes," and the natural desire "tnseo and be seen," basils use in the composition of human Bociety. With twenty thousand inhabitants, Savannah seems lo have no poor people. In various rambles, during tho few days of mv stav thero. I could find no ounrter of the city whero ihere wore any but comfortable dwel lings more than comlurtablo, indeed, lor the poorest inhabitant has an avenue of shade-trees before his door. and must see on open square from bis window. The luxuries of park culture, which the noblemen of England spend fortunes in maintaining around their dwellings, are hero at tho humblest man's threshold, freoof cost. No child can grow no in Savannah without Nn i nre for a nurse beautiful trees for the infant wakinc-! droam to build its nest in velvet grass, clover and but- i tercups, to make the world seem like a play-ground, and the commonest highway a path of flowers. Does ! anyone think that character is not n fleeted by such influences that hope and imogination, confidence and cheerful habit of temper, (to say nothing of health), 1 nru not nurtured by sucn surroundings in childhood r They make impressions too vivid and too universal not to have been intended by an all-wise Providenco ns a blessing to improve. Schools should be where there ore trees, streams, mountains teacherB for the play-houra as well. If I mav strengthen mv remark hv re calling what mado an impression on myself, I have for- gouon every circumstance ot a year or two that I was at school at Concord. New Hampshire, when a bov. ex cept the natural scenery of the place. The faces of my teacher and my playmates have long ago faded from my memory, while I remember the rocks and ed dies of the Merrimac, the forms of the trees on the meadow opposite Ihe town, nnd every bend of the river's current. Whether Governor Oglethorpe, in Joying out the city of Savannah, thought of more than the health and luxury in pnrhB and shade-trees, it is too late, perhapB to inquire but, to his beautifully rural plan, and energy of forecast in the completion of it, tho inhabitants aro indebted I believe, for a perpetual teaching of moral beauty, no less than for a sanitary luxury. KOSSUTH AND MAZZINI. The European correspondent of the New York Tribune says the proclamation to ihe Hungarian soldiers, purporting to be by Kossuth, is a forgery, ns ho wns opposed to the Milan movement as premature. , it ib also BBid lhat he will not formally deny its au thenticity, as it might discourago tho men who are implicated in the late movement. This correspondent thinks Iho rising is not yet disnoBed of. and that we shall soon hear more ol it. Meanwhile we give the proclamations of Koiiuth and Mazzini as they came to us: KOSSUTH'S PROCLAMATION. The folh wins document which nrofeasea to lis n proclamalioti oddressed by M. Kossuth to the Hungarian soldiers in Italy, has been published : IN THE NAME or THK HUNGARIAN NATION. TO THE SOL DIERS QUARTERED IN 1TAI.T. Soldiers; Cormudes! My activity is unlimited. 1 am about to fulfill rny intent. My intent is to free my country, to make her independent, free, and happy. 41 is nm uj iuruo wo nave oeen crusued. 1 ne torco ot he world never have sulhced to crush Hungary, f reason atone did it. I swear that force shall not conquer us, nor tronson injure us again. Our war is the war of the lihenv nf the world, and we are no longer alone. Not only the whole peop'e of our own country will be wilh us. not only will those once adverse to us now combat with us the common enemy, but all the peoplo of Europe will arise and unite to wave the banner of liberiy. By the force of the peoples of the world Iho totlering power ol the tyrants shall be destroyed. And ibis hall bo Uiu loot nut. Iii tliis war no nation fraternises more witli tho Hun garian than ihe Italian. Our interests aro one our enemy is one our struggle is one. Hungary is the rigid wing, and Italy the left wing, of the army head. The victory will bo common to both. therefore, 111 the immo ol my nation, have I made alliance with the Italian nation. The moment wo raise ttie banner of Iho liberty ol the world let the Italian soldier in Hungary unite witli the insurgent Hungarian nation, and the Hungarian soldier in Italy unite wilh insurgent Italy. Let all, wheresoever tho alarm shall be Bounded, combat against ihe common enemy. Whoso will not do this, be, the hireling of our country s executioner, snail never more see ins native land. Ho shall be lorever exiled as a traitor, us one who has sold the blood of his parents nnd ot ins country to the enemy. Ihe moment ol the insurrection is at hand; let not at moment find the Hungarian unprepared ; for uld it take them unprepared, should our nation not 1 friends, who have perished in nnconsoled weeping for tucu iuvvu diicf, imprisoned, exiieu.uutcnerea Dccauso ney uau not, nut desired, a country. Remind ymir young minds of thought outraged and restrained, of iho gieat traditionary past of Italy which they can continue onlv bv action, of the absolute no thingness of tho state they aro now in they the de scendants 01 ine men who have twice given civilization to Etiropo. Remind the soldiern of Italy of ihe dishonor of a servile uniiorm which the ioreigners derido, of the boiieB of their fathers left on the battle fields of Europe fur tho honor of Italy, of the true nlorv which crowns the warrior for right, for justice, for nation- amy. boldiers, women, youilis, people! let us have for the momont but ouo heart, one thought, one desire, one cry in our bouIb, one cry on our Una. " We will have a country wo will have un Italy ; and an Italy shall Attack, break at ovorv noiut the lona nnd wenlt linn of the enemy. Prevent them from concentrating themselves by killing or dispersing their Boldiers, do- atroying rontla and bridges. Diiorganizo them by striking at their oflicerfl. Ceaselessly pursue fugitives; be at war with the knife. Make arms of the tiles of your houses, of the stones of the streets, of the tools of your trades, of the iron of your crosseB. Spread the alarm by watch-fires kindled on every height. from one end of Italv to the other let tho alarm-bell of the people toll the death of tho enemy. Wherever you are victorious, move forward at once to the aid of thoBe nearest vou. Let the insurrection grow like an avalanche, wherever the chance goes against you ; run to the gorges, the mountains, the for tresses given you by nature. Everywhere Ihe battle will have broken out j everywhere you will find brothers, and. strengthened bv tho victories gained elsewhere, you will descend iuto the field agniu the day after. One only be our Hag the 11 a g of the nation. In pledge of oar fraternal unity, write on it tho wuros uoo, aim ine peoplo they alono are poweriul 1 to conquer, I luy alone do not betray. It is the Re-j publican flag which, in '48 aud '49 saved the honor ol ' Itnly t it is the (lag of ancient Venice; it is the flag of I Rime eternal Rome, the sacred metropolis, the temple of Italy and of the world ! I Purify yourselves, fighting beneath that flag. Lot the Italian people urise, worthy of llio God who guides them! Let woman be sacred ; let ago and childhood be sacred ; lot properly be sacred. Puuish Ibe thief us an enemy. Use for insurrection ihe arms, powder and uniforms taken from the foreign soldiers. To arms, to arms ! Our last word is Ihe bottle cry Let the man you have chosen to lead you send forth to Europe, on iho morrow, tho cry of victory. For tho Ihilion Committee. JOSEPH MAZZINf. AURELIO SAFFI. Mnurizio Qu irdia, Cesore Agoslini, Secretaries. (Horrcspcmocnce. The Convention I ts Candidates-Public Folioy, Measures, fiw). Bank Taxei in Cleveland-A Contrast. Ct.EVKi.AKD, February 28, 1853. Tho large and respectable number of delegates present at the State Convention, on the 22d the harmony of feeling existing the determination of spirit manifested lo fling to (he breeze once and again the glorious " old banner," ihit wus but lately trailed lt-feat and the character of those put In nomina tion for the Buffrages of the party, give general satisfac tion hero, and have awakened a desire that will not let the election of October go by default. Tiie popularity of Mr. Barrkre, 111 bis own district, Is a Biillicient guarantee lo iho peopleof the Stato of the correctness of his political opinions, and his worth ns a man. Campbell, Storer, Deuuisou, Galloway and Olds ave many and warm friends on ihe Reserve and the friends of these gentlemen will not fait to give a warm and cordial support to a candidate foe Governor, who received the fliirnuti-l)emocratic votes in his district for Congress, last fall. At the election, next October, our Slnlo and its af fairs will claim our undivided attention. It is indeed Stale election, entirely disconnected from nny Na- ional issues. It is a homo matter, fir home interests; tid in view of tho action of those who now bold tho reins of our Stato Government, it is expected lhat ev- ry man will feel liko doing his duty. expeditions after expeditions 1ms been fitted out to I pllOBC brotherhood, unity and hone, nnd in all the of ourcoinmoii humanity. Follow me, friends, 11 111. lor ctir Juiin: iney go way up among notarized : t..i t nears ami n.ce-uergs, and snuer amai.ng y nom emu , fiw Econoinil,t ihen conducted his neigh- and unger. Wot do hoy t;.ke to look for him with 1- . . , , . , , . . . f f ' J. . 7 . .. . . .. :: ' a . . combustibles at Ibe loot ol nirh troe. I hen without uai uiey mat's: (abuioiu rngiisnmau, wno uau .1 r...,i, 1 1 . 1. ... l,,rl,..lL.cpbylb.fir..l,..ru,ip,.nedl,i.o,... . nml L " d : , ...'.' WBr. biirnU .. h ,.r' 'i'nX' ninl llnti Witut tu i nti attain 1 lV'na '1 ' ' . , m, jimmy, 111.7 i,. 1 i timiw , . .,,.,,,, 0 ,, ., cria in rimh , , iiikv wiiii 1 ft iinnnmi ..... ... once, linked arm in arm, with Public Economy, de- to that (pointing to ihe picture,) lo see a oncoinmoll distance, and consequently could detect Sir John's vessel, prowiding ho alill sur wives Jimmy seemed really frightened when he had finished his speech: ho had tho look of a mnn who had gone a little too deep into science, and had made himself liatde to some scientific inquisition. I hazarded the remark, that a telescope eighty-three feet long would not onlv be inconvenient on board of a craft, but would possess no superiority over one of ordinary size, nn account ol iho convexity nt the water. Uut 1 w promptly nnd deservedly 'put down1 by a cutter, file-cutter, and the man who hail been slumbering by the fire. Jimmy Pond rubbed his forehead with a red handkerchief, aud seemed to feel that he had mado a splendid discovery, and if his friends felt disposed to buck it up, they could do 10 There 1b a satirical hit in (he following which 'biles rewdly t LAT Of Till DISCONTENTED. scending from the clouds to roast apples! Go home, my friends and follow my exnmplo, and then com mence tho iiroiltiction of hals, boots, shoe-peas, pig- iron, sheetings, pilch-forks, or suspender, or other subjects of national wealth; fur is it not manifest, that il you roast your npplo trees in May, your apples win grow already roasted in uctouer i DESCRIPTION Of SAVANNAH, nr n. p. wilms. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES 0i o'clock, a. m. Bills read a third time. 'Senate bill to authorize reli gious societies to sell real estate. Passed yeas fl!), ays 1. Hume bill supplementary tn the corporation act (al lowing turnpike companies lo incrrnse iheir stock). Passed yens (il, nayt 7. Mr. I.y'le gave notice ol his intention to introduce bill lo provide a mansion lor iho uovernor. Mr. Demi n a, Irom the committeo on Finance, whom was referred House bill No. 172, reported the same back, and recommended that the House disagree to Striate amendments. fThisia ilm bill striking nut the 1100 exemption clause of iho tax bill. Iho Senate amended by ex- emntinL'7o.l Mr. Damon moved to amend the netiute amendment by striking out 175 and inserting f.r0. Division de miuided, nnd the House agreed to strike nut $75 yeas r1, nava U. The question then turning un inscrliug .0, It was lost yens III, nays 42. Mr. Busline)! moved to insert $23. Agreed to yens 10, nays At. Mr. Sht'lluhnrgar inovtd to amend so lhat such cx emptioii should operate only in favor of I hose who bad no other property. 2A 0 clock, 0- tn Mr. O'Neil opposed the amendment of Mr. Sheila- birger, ns being unconstitutional, since the const ilu Hon required the exemption to apply lo each lndv viilunl. Mr. Shnlliihargor defended tho constitutionality ol lus amendment, and re I erred to the laws relating t cities ot the 1st and lid class, aa Instances where 1 In Legitlnturo hmt legislated wilh respect to cerlnii classes and not to ihe whole. The amendment wns lhs.ii agreed tn yeas IU, nay 33. Mr. Morgan moved to amend by requiring nil pro perty exempted 10 be valued by the ussessor, and re uirni-u ny mm io ine cnumy nuonor. i.obi. The amendment of the Senate as amended by tli House, was ihen rejected yeas nays 44. Rrports of Select Committee. Mr. Ward, of Crawford, reported back the bill 10 compel railroad coin tiles to fence their mads, with amendments, not re- quiring companies to fence their roads, but render! ni them liable for damage done to stock where roads are not lenceu according to previous laws, Mr. Oest moved to lay the bill on the tabte to bt primed. io. I must record, for invalids, that It was cool at Sa vannab cool enough for an invalid's great coat on the evening ot May the second. I had Imped better things of it. An old gentleman, 1o whom I sat next nt Ihe tea tahio, said it wm too cool tor nis daughter to leave her room. Ho was on his way with her to some more thermal resort in Honda, ot which 1 have lor gotten ibe name, A pale lady in blanket shawl sal opposite me. A summery and healing association coinrfl up usually with ihe mention 01 oavatinati, ihr namo being descriptive of a perennial feature of South ern scenery; and doubtless the general average of its temperature deserves it. Its caprices should be gunrd-od against, however. It has long been tho first refuge of the alarmed consumptive, and its history truly writ ten, would probably bo that nt a " midge ot Sighs," hy which many had returned tn health, and as many had passed on to remediless confirmation of disease. The bed-room candle, offered me by Prudence alter tea, was outvoted by a brilliant moon out of doors- fa "tie-vote," ot cntirBo, nn (lie republican principle, but tho individual moon, to my thinking, being a ma jority over (he Individual candle) aud 1 started tn get a hrst view ol savannah while sue was probably looking ber best. It was indeed a glorious night. And a more singular scene, than lhat city first seen by moon light, is not likely to fall often in the traveler's way, It IB taia 0111 curiously, am mo guiou uook lens us plan a chequer board, and every other square a park lnP( but tho stroets, besides, being unou wnn trees, anu avenues being pianteu iiirougu 1110 centre 01 ine principle ones, tho leaves form a complete ceiling over head, and no two stars at e risible at a time, 1 should ny from any side-walk or thoroughfare in the entire municipality. 1 have aomoiimes leit, in tho woods, 1 desire to climb up some lull tree and sre out and th snmo feeling comes ovor oue, after a while, in walking along miles ol a cioseiy-cnequorod carpet 01 light and shndo, with a root a cioseiy-cuequcred and intermi nable above, it occur ml to me whether we migli One of ihe conn lies of the Slate of Conned i( ut. ( 1 as not leave nut the sky a little too much, occasionally, ii wn Hra informed and believed boasts of a Juilgo who. lour improvements anil beautifying. though pool I j furniihed with those little refinements Whether these overshadowing trees act on the city usually met with in polished society, is an energetic, like the outspread hnud witu wincn a mother says irdwtl man. ami n nrnmiiinB lawver. A ne 11 ibor 01 " n is 1 10 iter cuiiurou, 111 iiiMmmiun 1 oui. his. some weeks ago. wns about to give awnv his that some peculiarly nuielizitig influence is exercised daughter In marriage, and having a deep-rooted dislike on Ihe habits and character of iho inhabitants, must tn the Clerical proiesaion, anu being ueierm'neu, as no ue tne stranger s .nvnrmum nuiruNiuu uiuuuu ue aaid. ' lo have 110 infernal nnrson in his house ho seut misht balance between this explanation nf it. and tli tor Ins Iriend, the judge, to permrm ine ceremony, town growing conaiu'rmu, uun iu inn anuumg ot The Judge came, and the candidates tor the connubial doers, irom its long use ns nicccn 01 invalid. Br vnk-n ink ma their nlnros hnlore him. he llitis addressed still a place, it seemed to mo, I had never been in be- tli. bridn t Y.iti swear vnti will tnnrrv this man f ' fore. Constantinople, with no wheels in its streets. Vn4.air'waa ibn rnnlv. 'And vou' (to the bride- and Venice, with its silent-eliding gondolas, are mnsv groom) 'swenr you will marry this woman f ' ' Well) tu Savannah. It is true that (he deep sand of every I do Baid the groom. 'Then, snys ihe Judge, ' 1 ihnrougiiiare mnKes cans anu carriages unhenrd, an swear you re marnedr 'A very excellent citizen ol the prolusion 01 leaves may so thicken the air as this iiln.ee writes the friend who sends us the above, deaden the common reverberations but there is 'whose benevolence is proverbial in an the region stillness more ueep ami universal man can thus obvi- round about, and who likes In refer lo his sell-made ously be accounted lor. 1 wus mere three Sundays-fortune, was the other dsv sivini counsel to a young f week dnva behaving themselves liko Sundays, th it friend, in whoso welfare he look imicti interest. 'Rely to say and tho hush of this first evening, which I on it, young man he said, ' there 11 tide in llio al- was inclined in nitnmue pnruy 10 strict observance ot fairs of men which, as Slmkspeare says, if taken at 1 the Sabbath, was, 1 afterwards found, the perpetual low tide, leads them on to fortune That quotation is I habit of the people. In my two hours' ramble, I more ttian equal to another I came across recently ma 1 passed through whole sireeis wimom meeting a 10111. newspaper, by which a well-known passage from the 1 1 scarce saw ten persons altogether, in the two hours. bible was msde in rrnu : ' r irsi take ine beam out 01 1 1 nmaing iue uomea sumim uo mouor, mr ine ine nm thine own eye, and then thou shalt see clearly te stick stirring abroad, I looked for open windows and lighted in ihy brother's !' By ihe way, I waa pleased with a rooms but a sign, even of a single lamp in the front touching description in your 'Editor's Table' Inr Jan-1 apartments ot houses, was strangely rare. There was uary, of a blind girl's restoration of sight ; but It struck I everywhere tho shut up look of families absent. For me rauier queer ly, mat sne snouia express ner astou-1 long aisuuces 1 saw numiuq w uiaiuru uie iuea iorci- isDmeni inai 1119 aoewr wis so wnue. using norn my suggesieu py mo okucsiivo luuago anu mo luneu- Oh, tell ma not or happiness, Cunfmitnnot,' anil turn aiutfl I wsnt a lot of thins; lo blfia My Ills, just now so touro. I wsnt s younjrr wife, or two, WHif duelled, fsir; Minn's pant, and (though fondly truo) hoilns tu lose hor hair. t sigh for slstlna, pnwir, nd fame ; Ol WMllh I want 'a liespi' I would not mind much how It camp, Nor who It cauied to wrap. I wsnt, whn itrnttim on my way Willi clothing rlrh and rare, To ha folks Idt llirir bats, and say, ' That's tho frost millionaire I ' ' I'd lihn a splendid hnute to buy r'ltth ATriiuo or soj And hate my mentals: then I'd cry, You fellows I Coma I' or ' (lo 1 1 Then In snmn churrb IM havn s pew, The creed no mutter which ; His cnihlons should hn soft nd new, Tho confregaiion rich I I'd have rare food, and ptatc, and llnrsns and carriage grana; Pictures and rmi and ttsmes fine droit rings upon my hand. New F.ra t haats thy coming day ; Kqualityl bruio; 'T Is lime tin rich hive had their day For yrinciftti to win. 1 Y laws that make as poor men cower, Ynur tlmn'a ui'tr up, I think, l.tt'i itmi our club mrru la an hour, I'll go and Uko sdilnkt improve the opportunity, our dear country would be lost forever, and our national h)g would be covered ith ignominy. . know that every Hungarian is ready tor the war liberty. The blood shed by tho martyrs, the suf- rings ol llio country, have chanced oven children into tioroos. No nn'ion yot rewarded its brave sons so liberally ns lie Hungarian nation will reward hers. After tho vic tory, tho State property shall bo distributed among the army, nnd ine lammes 01 the victims 01 patriotism ut the coward ami the traitor shall die. And I, Iheretoro, make it known to you, Boldiers, in be name of the nation, lhat whoever brings yoti tins, iy order, is expressly sent to you, that he may report 1 mo tin' lavori rs 01 utieriy 111 tne army stationed 111 nlv. lhat he may (ell you, in my mime, bow von hoiild organize yourselves. Accept ihe instructions that are forwarded to you by ibe nation, through mo, nnd follow them. Let it be so in every town und district of our own country and everywhere. Bravo ones! The Honveds and the Hussars have covered with glory ihe name of our nation. The world looks upon the Hungarian (lag as (he banner of liberty. We will preserve that glory and satisfy that expectation. It la principally on yon mat me eyes ni 1110 world aro turned, for your number is great. The arms nre in your bauds; a generous blood in your veins I the love of the country, and the thirst of vengeance on her executioners ia in your breasts. Your tusk is glorious and easy; for you are among a nation which will; give Its own millions of combatants against Austria. From Rome to the Island of the Sicilians from the Sava to the country beyond the Rhine all ibe poo pi nre unanimous in a cry, joined to ttie clang of million of arms. Let God be our judge. Down with the ty rants! Long live the liberty ot the people! Long tive our country : isravoonea! uy this cry your voice will he Itki Joshua s voice, at the bidding ol which the Jericho tyrants shall fall. So I order, in the name of ihe nation. Let every one oney. 1 win inorny ue among you. au revotr. God be with you. KOSSUTH. February, 18.J. ' currency is wholly and entirely a commercial one, snd will regulate itself, u the value of flour and pork are regnlated. It is time that " Banks aud Bank Reform" were taken nut of the aronn of politic in Ohio. The war upon our currency, and against our banks, has been waged by demagogues, for base and only selfish purposes, aud for place and power. It is time the people understood it so. It is time they looked upon demagogues, who moulli the words, " Banks and bankers, chartered rights and chartored privileges," a men who deem far more of a place for themselves, than they do of the welfare of those whose prejudices thoy would inflame, aud whoso passions they would excite, by political chicanery, aud by drawing pictures from (he imagination, of outrageous and grievous wrongs, which another party would impose upon the " dear people." However much parties may differ whatever may bo iheir measures of public policy, this much is true they fall on all alike. Whatever policy or law will benefit one farmer, or mechanic, or tradesman, iu Ohio, will nocessarily benefit all the rest. And whatever will injure the one, will injure the others. Our inter ests, as n poople, nre inseparably connected. They are one and the same. Wise, wholesome, judicious measures wilt promote them. And it is for the people lo see to it that a pnrty is put In power who will advocate and adopt such measures. It is ever base and unmanly, for the men of any party, to excite by misrepresentation, nny portion of the people against any class engaged In a useful and legitimate business. Money, everywhere, has more or less power. It creates for itself power, as learning and genius creato for themsolvos power. The demagogue knowing this fact, seeks to arouse passions, and excite prejudiceB agaitiBt monied institutions. The nomocracy of Ohio have been hard at work in this miserable business. They have over-acted. Let me show up in ihe matter of taxes on our banks in this city, the spirit of Democracy In Ohio. That spirit is opposed to the best interests of our people, as it tends to drive away instead of inviting capital to our Slate and it is wrong, because it makes unequal tho burthens of taxation. Art. 12, Brc. 3, of the Oonsiittition of Ohio, says: " Property employed in bunking, shall always bear a burden of taxation equal lo that imposed 011 the property of individuals." Now let us look at the figures of bonk taxes in this city. The following are the taxes assessed by Democracy upon ihe banks iu Cleveland : Assessed. Commercial Br. Bank, . City flunk Merchnnta Br. Bank,... Canal Bank , Forest City Bank, $-VKM01 .131,1! 17 , 4(1(1,021 402, y in . 31,217 Taied. $10,IU7 55 7 0,G15 02 7 7,240 43 4 8,378 72 4 5(iG 47 3 Total, tlp!)8a,4:,2 f35,998 21 5 Is there any justice, equity or constitution in such a tax imposed on our banks 7 Tho five bauks above named have Cipitul paid in $125,000 00 0 Tax 35,998 21 5 Amount of merctionts' and manufacturers' capital, moneys and credits, in ibis city in 1852 1,373,330 00 0 Tax 24.857 27 3 Now, let any man for a single moment look at this enormous wrong, and ask himself tho question, why $425,000 of capital, invested lu banking, in fur 11 idling a safe and convenient currency for the purpose of business, should pay a tax of $11,140 94 2 more lhan is paid on $1,373,330 invested in trade, manufactures, bonds aud mortgages, in private banking and exchange, &c.f A man has only to look at these figures and be satisfied of the open and gross violation of the constitutional rule of taxing banks. Tho amount of merchants' capital, manufacturers' stock, and moneys und credits in this county, entered on the duplicate for taxation in 1852, was $2,049,065. Tho bank lax is some $5,000 more lhan is paid on Ibis whole amount. Let us look at a few cases of taxes paid by individu- MAZZINPS PROCLAMATION. The following proclamation was posted all over M an, ana has ucen aprond in other pans of Italy : ITALIAN NATIONAL COMMITTEE. Italians Brothers ! The Mission of the National Italian Committee is ended; your mission begins. T day the last words which wo, your brothers, utter you is " insurrection to morrow, mingling wilh the raiiKs 01 1110 people, we win aid you to maintain it. Insurrection I Tho moment matured, panted f three long yenrs, bus arrived. Let us seize it. It not deceived by appearances 1 be uot misled by tin cowardly sophistries ol lukewatm men. iho eniu surtnee ot Jburope, irom Spain lo our own land, tun (ireeco to holy Poland, i a volcanic crust, beneath which sleeps a lava which will burst forth in lorronts at Ihe upheaving or Ilaly. Four years ngo, the Insurrection of Sicily wns followed by ten Europonn revolutions; twenty European revolutions will follow yours all bound by one compact, nil sworn to one fraternal aim. We have friends oven iu tho ranks of armies who rule us; there aro entire people whoso alarm cry will answer to yours. The national democracies of Europe lorm oue organized camp, vanguard ot ine greni army of tho people, fearnoUolalion. The luitiutivo ol Italy is the initiative nf Europe. Insurrection) Sacred a ihe thought of country that consecrates iM strong in will aud iu concentrated energy as its aim, which is justice, amelioration and free fratei mil life for nil ; let it rise and convert martyrdom into victory. Tho thousandsof victims who have f ill-oti with tho sacred name of Ilaly on their lips, deserve this at our hands. Be it tremendous as ihe tempest on our seas. Be it obstinate, immovable as the Alps which surround you. Between the Alps and tho extreme Sicilian sea aro twenlv-hve miliums ot us, and a Hun dred thousand torcijniers. It is iho struggle, of a mo ment, il you do but w ill. Insurrection! Let the grand word lea j from eity to city, from town lo town, from village to village, like the electric current. Arouse, arise, awnka to the cru-aado fever, all ye who have Italian hearts Italian trms. Remind the poople of their unjust tune rings, their riehta demied them, their ancient power, and the great future of liberty, prosperity, education and equality they may conquer at a uounu men of the State ; aud it is their duty to render good account of themselves when the day of action comes; and I trust they wilt. With wise and judicious legislation, the future of Ohio will be proud and glorious. And it is the duty of every young man lo feel a deep and anxious solicitude for the honor nnd prosperity of the Stite. Wo have old men to counsel us; aud guided hy heir experience in our State matters, wo need not go astray. It cannot be said of our candidates that they are old aud hacknied politicians. Thoy are alt new men to ihe great mass of tho people. Mr. Barrere has been hon- ired by the peopleof his dtstiict as one qualified to represent them in the Halls of our National Legisla ture. Dr. Allen has never been in any public official position. I huve known him many years. He I: gentleman of highly cultivated mind of fine literary taste of extensive reading nn effective speaker, and ploisingnnd popular manner. Mr. Van Vorhes Is pop Inr iu his own county; has boen fully endorsed by the people, and has shown himself a safe legislator and be Is a " good fellow." Mr. Brsclnnan comes recommended by the business men of Hamilion, ns an intelligent and enterprising German citizen. Mr Gib sou made his mark during ihe last cimpaign, and won for himself an enviable reputation. Mr. Waddle is a practical engineer, just such a mnn as our public work need, who will not play demagogue over bridges, nor degrade himself and his Stato by mob manifestos nnd recommendations. The nomination of K T. Barkm for the bench is a judicious one. The Judiciary of our State cannot bo guarded wilh too much care. It should bo composed of able and homst mon. F. T. Backus la 0110 ol the best luwyers, o bis Bge, in the State. He litis won his wny lo distinction un lidt'd and alone, by the force of his own mind by strict lutegnty of character by perseverance and m dualry. In eatly life Mr. B. wns left an orphan, and liis widowed mother found for hun a home wilh farmer, with whom he lived for several year. Hi young mind desired knowledge. Ho wn fond books and study ant prepared himself for Yale Col lege, nf which venerable inilltutioii ho is a graduate. Ho worked his way through, leaching lit winter, thui earning funds to pay expenses. In 1811(1 he came stranger to our city, entered Ins name as a student iu the office of Messrs. Bolton & Kelley, ami opened select school, to obtain means of support. Some ol llio most promising young men in our cliy were hi scholars, and will bear testimony to his thoroughness and capacity. In two years he was admitted to the Bar, and saou after was elected Prosecuting Attorne; and was one of the best Prosecutors this county ever had. He was afterwards elected tu Iho House aud Senate of Ohio, and won for himself a good reputation Mr. Backus is a thorough lawyer Is ambitious in Ii profession, and determined to place himself in its first rank. He will do bo. He lu iudomitahle will and energy is capable of long and laborious investtgatii is a good scholar, and a hard student. If olected ihe Bench, Mr B. will toko wilh him a personal char acter Hinullicd and pure a mind well and thoroughly versed in the prltciplea, ami sharpened by the practice of law, to which are ndded habits of industry ami d nity of diameter. I have known Mr. B. long and we! To his cHro may the people of Ohio, iu unlimited c-m fidence, placo life, reputation, liberty, nnd properly Never would the ermine of the Bench bo foiled on him. The three pitrtios in Ohio have tluir candidates tho field, nnd are now nil faitly before the people. The Whig policy In Ohio is one under which our State has prospered. (I gave lo the Stale a sound cur rency, a wise and judicious tax law, ami n system internal improvements, under whose Influence iho snurcos of our State aro developing, at d from wbii our people are in coming yenrs to reap rich anil abn dant harvests. The lenders of tho Democracy u and ore fighting our currency ; they opposed by mi representation, ridicule, and derision, iho Whig tax law, and they intended to ctipp.e and destroy our in ternal improvements. It is a singular fact, that tli peopleof Ohio have placed in mwcr a party whoso aim and policy have been oppmrd lo their best inter ests. But so it Is. Go now tn any rational man iu the Slate, nnd usl him if a mixed currency is not necessary lo Ibe trans action of the biuiness nnd co nnieice of ihe State Ask bitn If the Whig tax law wus not correct In general principles and features f Ask him il our internal improvements, our cunul, our Me Adam roads, our plank roads, our rnilronds, nre not of untold bene, fit to our peoplef Aud he will answer eieh of Ihese questions In iho ntllruuitivo. And these aro Whig measurrs. As to tho currency and banks, a political party has nu more to do with them, than it has to do wi:h (he Tak 633 50 Amount of sales last year 400,000 00 J. G , capital assessed $10,101 00 Tax 291 42 Amount of sales last yenr, some 300,000 00 B.'s capital assessed $5,000 00 Tax 90 50 Amount of stiles, about 130,000 00 doing wHtatiaitt tMI.. mm Remind your women of the mothers, the sisters, the price of a barrel of flour, or a hog. The question of I have made this exhibit for the purpose of showing Democracy in Ohio. It is indeed a beautiful exhi bition. The banks never will pay these taxes. They never ran bo colli cted. There is not a court in the tale lhat will not decide in their favor. Democracy conventions, in resolutions, in legislatures, In pick 's, and chisds, and crowbars, and on the slump rampant and roaring, ifluminnting its votaries, Is one ng ; but before courts nnd juries, where it has to al with law and facts, it is quite another thing. These demagogues havo no influence; their word 00 power; and when thrown into the scales of justice, y are soon "tossed In air. There was much truth In a remark made to me a few years ago in Columbus, by a distinguished Demo crot. In speaking of the legislation of onr State, he said : " Nothing has been legislated for in Ohio, for the last ten years, but Hanks and Democracy." He was tdrt. Yours, iruly, Quivino, HEW YORK CITT COUNCIL. Niw York. February 28, 1853. Notwithstanding tho clTurts mado by the Al- lermen to throw difficulties in the way of the Grand Jury in their investigation of the charges of malfeasance against members of the Common Council, certain facts were elicited which being male public, have fully confirmed the reports ao long current in reference to the corrupt doings of this last named body. Such a presentment as that now before us probably reveals a worse condition of things, in connection with our city government, than mnuy wero prepared to learn, even among those who were well aware that honor and up rightness had no place among the men to whom the nteresls of our metropolis have of late been commit ted. We are furnished with ihe proof that bribery to a great extent has been usrd to obtain of the corporation such grants or privileges, as they, on the part of tho city, were empowered to bestow. W boever wished them to lake any official action, in any matter of importance, had to hand in for distribution, such aam-snlcration as they saw fit to name. An individual want ed suppressed a report relative to a Wall street pier to effect this ho had lo pay to an Alderman five hun- I red dollars. Another applied for the Catharine street ferry l when the grant was before the Board ofAsiis. 1 Btils he was oalled on by one of the members and told that unless he paid five hundred dollars, no favorable action would be tnken. He acconlinglyorArd wr (he amount and received the grant. Afterwards the tame Assistant Alderman wailed upon him again and de manded three thousand dollar for his services In the matter 1 hut he was rather late, for the grantee having (he business already settled, declined any further pay mont. TheOsixevonrt street property was sold for $100,000. It came out before the Grand Jury lhat the sum of $300,000 might have been obtained for the same prop, erty, from another applicant. He gave notico, before tho Bale, that he wanted It ut that price. The pre eminent says, " it was clearly shown that enormous sums of money have been e upended for and towards the procurement of railroad grants in Ihe cliy, and that towards the procurement of the Eighth Ave nue llnilrond grant, a mm so lar o lhat would s'artle the incredulous, was expended ; but In consequence of the voluntary absence of important witnesses, the Grand Jury wns left without direct testimony of the particular recipients of ihe different amounts." If the Grand Jury had had more lime, other corrupt doing would no doubt have been brought to light. The foreman requested the Recorder to continue ihe inves'igatlon, ami it is to be hoped that lie wilt com ply. Ho Is authorised to summon witnesses, and can perhaps procure testimony which in this Instance was withheld from (he inquest through tho legal action of two Aldermen, titling ss judges, in ihe Court of Russians, The Grand Jury indicted Alderman Wesley Smith and Alderman James M. Bard, for misdemeanor. The presentment was read in the Court of General Sessions in whirh they, with tlm Hon. KecorderTillon, were Die presiding jtioges. 1 hey nsienea quite attentively lo ihe charges against them, but did not seem nt all dblurhed. Knowing the power of money with themselves, ibey perhaps think llieycnn use it to slave off Justice. But we hope that, if Ibis be ao, they will find themselves dereived. Yours truly, W. Peanut are raised in Immense quantities in Virginia. One comity in the State (Isle of Wight), realizes annually, by their sale, twu hundred and fifty thousand dollars.